The Kid
AMERICA FTW
- Joined
- May 28, 2005
- Messages
- 12,765
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I don't have much time to write, laptop's dying. So I'll get to the point quickly.
I've noticed a shift in priorities within the fanboy population. Where once I'd come here and be blasted for liking a change from the comic book, now I returned to this wonderful board to find many claiming directors should ignore the source instead.
So I'm just completely confused by this hypocracy I'm noticing. I'm all for being truthful to the spirit and general story of a comic, but can accept deviations if it doesn't become the proverbial "INO" kind of movie.
For spidey, I accepted the many stupid changes raimi made because I loved spidey and want to see spidey do his spidey thing on screen. plus it wasn't ridiculously far off from the source, which I'm not very familiar with anyway.
Batman Begins of course recieved praise mostly for "getting batman right". Which I don't fully agree with, but I'm sure they'll do better for batman in TDK anyway so no big deal.
A lot of other comic films and tv shows also have met hostile (as if the show killed their mother) critical reaction for no greater reason than it not being exactly page for page like the comic book.
Now after years on the hype I notice priorities seem to have shifted in two directions. One, which thinks ignoring the comic in whatever ways is fine, and the other which thinks like always on the hype, the comic is gospel.
I'm a more liberal kind of person who's open to new things, but I also don't want my precious comic character tampered with too much. What I wonder now is what we as a community of fanboys truly thinks should be the best approach to adapting superhero comics at this point in time?
I've noticed a shift in priorities within the fanboy population. Where once I'd come here and be blasted for liking a change from the comic book, now I returned to this wonderful board to find many claiming directors should ignore the source instead.
So I'm just completely confused by this hypocracy I'm noticing. I'm all for being truthful to the spirit and general story of a comic, but can accept deviations if it doesn't become the proverbial "INO" kind of movie.
For spidey, I accepted the many stupid changes raimi made because I loved spidey and want to see spidey do his spidey thing on screen. plus it wasn't ridiculously far off from the source, which I'm not very familiar with anyway.
Batman Begins of course recieved praise mostly for "getting batman right". Which I don't fully agree with, but I'm sure they'll do better for batman in TDK anyway so no big deal.
A lot of other comic films and tv shows also have met hostile (as if the show killed their mother) critical reaction for no greater reason than it not being exactly page for page like the comic book.
Now after years on the hype I notice priorities seem to have shifted in two directions. One, which thinks ignoring the comic in whatever ways is fine, and the other which thinks like always on the hype, the comic is gospel.
I'm a more liberal kind of person who's open to new things, but I also don't want my precious comic character tampered with too much. What I wonder now is what we as a community of fanboys truly thinks should be the best approach to adapting superhero comics at this point in time?