it was. but this is not the reason it made mony.
the main money is from the masses. they dont know the source material. so how can the faithfulnes of the comic be important for the movie succes?I don't think so. I think it's hard to make a hugely successful comic book film without a certrain degree of fideltiy to the source material. I'm not saying it's automatic, but it's a key ingredient.
showtime:
agree. i think they used the faithfulnes of the comics and combained it so that the masses could enjoy it.
7plus it had a good main actor,cool suit,action and of course humor.all those elements are important for a big budget movie in summer.
the main money is from the masses. they dont know the source material. so how can the faithfulnes of the comic be important for the movie succes?
hmmmm could be....or could not be true.The comic fans can and will destroy project if they can. Isn't it obvious? Haven't we been discussing SR for 2 years and how well it did with the GP, yet it doesn't have a sequel in production? I guarantee you, if SR had not divided the fans and been more faithful to the comics we would be talking about the already in production sequel and not 'gee, when (or if) production on a sequel will start.'
i think the studio was thinking money and masses.
jon was there to balance it. he knew what the studio demands. so he needed to use it from the comiss and make it work in a movie for the masses.
or maybe iron mans story is just in the comics already for the masses.
hey making a superman movei for the masses that uses elements from the comics is the way to go.No doubt.
That's part of it. I'm just suggesting that the route to success with comic films has to include that faithfulness to the source material. It's never going to be 100%, but it's importance has to be taken seriously. I think the approach you mention above " use it from the comiss and make it work in a movie for the masses" is on target. Adapt it. Don't change it or re-invent it. Make it relevant but don't lose the spirit of the character in the adaptation.
I think the more well known a character is the more closely the comics have to be followed as well.
hmmmm could be....or could not be true.
maybe its just that WB was dumb enough to expect 100 milions more from SR. which is IMO idiotic because SR was nto a movie for such a big BO.
plus we know that there are camps at WB. one wants the sequel. one dont. one wanted teh JL and they won. tehy won until everything felt apart.
maybe its because at WB not everyone wants the same. the sequel. but maybe its really because of the fans.
maybe and really mabye the movie just didnt WOOOW the masses( and we all know it didnt).
people talked like crazy when 300 came out. its not a smart movie. but its a movie that you can enjoy.
WB knew exactly what movie they are getting. they dont give you the money and let you do your thing for the next 12 months. they were the ones who gave singer more money for the extra buller scene because they knew there wasnt enough money shots.It's not crazy for WB to have expected big numbers from a new Superman franchise, but it is crazy for them to have expected big numbers from SR after viewing it. But at that point it was too late, budgets, projections and expectations had already been set.
WB knew exactly what movie they are getting.
they dont give you the money and let you do your thing for the next 12 months.
they were the ones who gave singer more money for the extra buller scene because they knew there wasnt enough money shots.
again they knew. its over.its WB money and its the character we love. singer is a tool for WB to bring superman to the big screen.
The comic fans can and will destroy project if they can. Isn't it obvious? Haven't we been discussing SR for 2 years and how well it did with the GP, yet it doesn't have a sequel in production? I guarantee you, if SR had not divided the fans and been more faithful to the comics we would be talking about the already in production sequel and not 'gee, when (or if) production on a sequel will start.'
I dunno. Maybe if Singer had the power to make 2 movies at the same time...Kinda like what he wanted to do with X3 and SR. But since he chose to do Valkyrie first...You are getting Valkyrie first.
Mego, there was a lot in the script that was cut out, but WB knew what they were getting. They didn't just walk into the theater not knowing which cut they were getting.
I dunno. Maybe if Singer had the power to make 2 movies at the same time...Kinda like what he wanted to do with X3 and SR. But since he chose to do Valkyrie first...You are getting Valkyrie first.
If SR had come out of the gates like gangbusters and perfromed wildly to wildly positive praise from all, then the sequel would have been greenlit right away like TDK, and pre-production would have begun. Didn't Singer pitch a 3 film concept to begin with?
of courseThen WB truly are crazy for expecting huge numbers on that film. IMO, they are lucky to get what they got if they knew what they were getting.
SO you think from the very beginning they knew what they were getting?

Mego, there was a lot in the script that was cut out, but WB knew what they were getting. They didn't just walk into the theater not knowing which cut they were getting.
If SR had come out of the gates like gangbusters and perfromed wildly to wildly positive praise from all, then the sequel would have been greenlit right away like TDK, and pre-production would have begun. Didn't Singer pitch a 3 film concept to begin with?
this is not the whole thing. they singed on october 2006 a contract where singer gets payed not matter what.I've posted the Variety article before where it states that Singer wanted to make a non comic book film and that Valkyrie would delay WB's hopes of mounting an SR sequel.
Anyway, WB did sign him up for a sequel back in October 2006. Now, by that time they sure as hell had the BO results. Yet they signed him up. They must have wanted that sequel...
Exactly.
I disagree. They didn't greenlit TDK right away. They took their sweet time, about a year, wasn't it?