Saint
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the devil, maybe.
LMAO! This is probably the best post ever.
the devil, maybe.
My point is that big name actors don't always make the film successful (just look at Tom Cruise). You also need a good director. You are trying to discount the success of Levy by saying that his films have big name actors. Once again the handwriting on the walls shows that he has been able to make a film successful with whatever budget he is given.
Yes. If they have seen at least one movie in a year and they say that the entertainment experience is money well spent then I would expect that most of the people who saw NAM would have thought that it was worth the experience. Yes, this is 2007, but the 2006 study is not out yet. I doubt that there will be that much of a difference in a year's time.
Then why are you defending them? I think they got it wrong with NAM because if you look at the numbers it was a popular film. 70 million people is pretty significant (that's almost 1/4 of the population of in the US). The same thing goes for his other films. So what if the think it was bad. There were enough people who went to see the films to make them successful.
I don't think they buchered Doctor Doom any more that he has been buchered in the comics (Victor Van Damme decendant of Dracula in the Ultimate titles?). Once again that is a matter of opinion and really had no bearing on the success or failure of the film.
Making a darker film would have been more riskier since it would have played to a smaller demographic. By going the conservative route (making a more conservative, family friendly film) they were able to acheive success and get another film.
I understand that out of a population of 16 users, there was only one that had a negative response. Only one.
That is because most of you are quick to say that a film "sucked" because it lost money.
NO ONE is saying that a big name actor guarantees success. But they do HELP. Do you really think Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson didn't draw people in to Night at the Museum?..
ClarkLuther said:What the hell?!![]()
You admit that you used a study of audience opinion on general movies in 2005 (which had many successful big budget films, like Batman Begins and ROTS), the WRONG year, and that somehow leads to your assumption that most people would think Museum was worth their time? Also, why the black-and-white poll? A movie can be "worth" it and just be ok or so-so, something that kept you entertained without actually being very good...
ClarkLuther said:Uh, 45% is NOT that bad of an overall rating. It's just a little below 50%, which numerically would mean an average film. The "consensus" stated at RT is "Parents might call this either a spectacle-filled adventure or a shallow and vapid CG-fest, depending on whether they choose to embrace this on the same level as their kids." Not exactly a scathing, hateful put down. Basically, the critics said it was a so-so movie when viewed on the level of any other movie, but that it would also be mindless fun that would appeal to kids...
ClarkLuther said:It's a matter of opinion, but you'll be hard pressed to find many fans who didn't think Doom was butchered.
Movie Doom was crappy even if you knew nothing about the comic version. If he followed the comics, then he would have been a grand, majestic villain. But the movie version was utterly mediocre. He was just some cliche rich jerk who even lacked an evil scheme, with scenes and a motivation blatantly ripped off from movie Norman Osborn.
ClarkLuther said:Having the villain be appropriately dark doesn't make the movie dark. Most fans will tell you that Doom is the comic equivalent of Darth Vader, and should have come across that way in the FF movie. Darth Vader is certainly a dark villain, but the Star Wars movies are NOT considered dark. They're even rated PG. However, they are darker, and have much more substance, than the forgettable fluff that FF was...
ClarkLuther said:I understand that you DON'T understand what sample sizes are.
ClarkLuther said:I don't say that. Financial success and artistic success are NOT the same. I've said that over and over.
Wait a minute. I don't really see where they changed the character any more than what he was originally in the comics. He still was a classmate of Reed Richards and Ben Grimm, his face was scarred as a result of a failed experiment, and he was still air to the Latvarian throne. They only modernized the character to relate to today's day and age - no different from what they have done to him in the comics over the years. In actuallity the modernization was more in line with the Ultimate Doom character. As far as being dark, I believe Doom did murder someone in the film. I think they stayed faithful to the source material, and by the way, Dr. Doom is no Darth Vader, he's Dr. Doom, and there shouldn't be any comparison.
No, a "logical" choice would have been someone who has directed at least one action film--even one light-hearted.He still had to work with them and the rapport that a director has with the actors is a major factor in the success of a film. Look, you could argue this point nine ways to Sunday but the fact remains that this guy (Levy) has never made a motion picture that has lost money. Even his film "Just Married" with Ashton Krucher and Brittany Murphy made $56 million on an $18 million budget in 2003. The studios know his work and that is why he is in demand. I think he is a logical choice for "The Flash" since it will be a film about a marginal character in the DC Universe (compared to Superman, and Batman) and is being targeted to both kids and young adults alike in his stories and merchandising.
Then perhaps you'll understand why we don't want a Director with a 24% average Rotten Tomatoes score working on the Flash.Umm... If you got a 45% on your math test that would be considered a failing grade. I don't think you would want a doctor to operate on you knowing that he had a 1.8 GPA (out of 4.0, which is 45%) in med. school.
So you're "quite sure" that the Fantastic Four film created millions of new Dr. Doom fans? Then why does the Fantastic Four comic not sell in the millions? Where are the millions of fans you (incorrectly) claim the film created? Why aren't they buying the book? Better yet, why didn't they buy the "Books of Doom" mini-series about the origin of Doctor Doom last year? Oh, right: because these phantom fans don't exist.I have to dissagree. I am quite sure that there were millions of people who saw the film (that have now become fans)
I don't see how they could say that he was crappy.
Ha! Dr. Doom inspired George Lucas to create Darth Vader. Jesus, you're really out of your league here. It doesn't matter that the got some of the details right, they got the personality of the character wrong. Doom is not Generic Lex Luthor Clone #674532, nor is he a cosmic mutant with the powers of Colossus and Electro. Most important of all, Doom is not a dip*hit. Doom is not a petty criminal, and he is not a person who comes to power through any accident: he makes himself powerful. He took over his home country in his twenties, for Christ's sake--and he didn't do it because he was a generic power hungry jerk, he did it because he believed it was right.Wait a minute. I don't really see where they changed the character any more than what he was originally in the comics. He still was a classmate of Reed Richards and Ben Grimm, his face was scarred as a result of a failed experiment, and he was still air to the Latvarian throne. They only modernized the character to relate to today's day and age - no different from what they have done to him in the comics over the years. In actuallity the modernization was more in line with the Ultimate Doom character. As far as being dark, I believe Doom did murder someone in the film. I think they stayed faithful to the source material, and by the way, Dr. Doom is no Darth Vader, he's Dr. Doom, and there shouldn't be any comparison.
No, a "logical" choice would have been someone who has directed at least one action film--even one light-hearted.
Saint said:Then perhaps you'll understand why we don't want a Director with a 24% average Rotten Tomatoes score working on the Flash.
Saint said:So you're "quite sure" that the Fantastic Four film created millions of new Dr. Doom fans? Then why does the Fantastic Four comic not sell in the millions? Where are the millions of fans you (incorrectly) claim the film created? Why aren't they buying the book? Better yet, why didn't they buy the "Books of Doom" mini-series about the origin of Doctor Doom last year? Oh, right: because these phantom fans don't exist.
Saint said:Here's the thing you seem to be missing entirely--the character should be done correctly. It doesn't matter if Joe Blow who has never read a comic book liked the deflated, boring, cliched piece of crap version of Doom from that film. We didn't like it, because it wasn't anything like Doom. It doesn't matter that it made money. Do you get it? We don't care about the box office returns. We don't care about the public reception. We care about accurate and well-done adaptations of our favourite characters. Doom was neither accurate nor well done, bottom line.
Saint said:Success is irrelevant. All that matters is whether I enjoy the film. If a film I don't like (like Fantastic Four) does well and earns a sequel, what good does that do me? It just means they'll give me more of the same--which I didn't like the first time! Successful trash only results in more trash. I would rather have a Flash film be made properly and fail, then have it made wrong and spawn sequels. I would rather have a single quality film than a series of turds, like Fantastic Four.
Saint said:Ha! Dr. Doom inspired George Lucas to create Darth Vader. Jesus, you're really out of your league here. It doesn't matter that the got some of the details right, they got the personality of the character wrong. Doom is not Generic Lex Luthor Clone #674532, nor is he a cosmic mutant with the powers of Colossus and Electro. Most important of all, Doom is not a dip*hit. Doom is not a petty criminal, and he is not a person who comes to power through any accident: he makes himself powerful. He took over his home country in his twenties, for Christ's sake--and he didn't do it because he was a generic power hungry jerk, he did it because he believed it was right.
Saint said:What was his master plan? "Oh, I'll just shoot this missile at them." What? Are you serious? For the love of God, Doom has stolen the powers of Gods! He's escaped from hell! The idiots writing that script had forty years of comics to draw from, but Doom did none of the things he does in the comics because he was too busy being a pu*sy. "Oh no, Susan doesn't like me, now I'm sad! I'd better take revenge!"
Saint said:The character in that film wasn't Dr. Doom--he was an entirely different character who happened to have the same name.
We have yet to see how "The Flash" will come out so I don't think it is right to condemn it now, but looking at the track record of Shawn Levy and the fact that seems to be a respected director among the studios in the industry we should have no reason to believe that this film will not be a success.
By success do you mean BO wise or as a good film ? which i admit is quite subjective
I will be honest with you, hunter rider. I do not expect "The Flash" to be an academy award winning picture (though it could have a chance to get recognition for SfX or musical score). When I say success I mean BO wise and I mean the ability to make a film within the given budget and come out with a significant profit margin. It seems like a lot of people equate bad films with its loss of money. To me they are certainly not necessarily bad (for that is subjective), but they were failures (at the BO at least).
Oh i'm not expecting Oscar worthy and never was,i'd be happy with something as fun and enjoyable as the first Mummy movie
I get where you are coming from with the success though,just wanted to clarify it![]()
He directed one episode of Birds of Prey, which was a pretty bad show to begin with, and Jett Jackson, which was a crappy Disney Channel show. Neither makes him appropriate for the Flash.I don't think you have looked at his resume. He did direct the TV series "Birds of Prey" and "The Famous Jett Jackson". Those are considered to belong to the Action/Adventure generes (not comedies).
Yeah, Stellar logic: instead of hiring an experienced adventure director for an adventure film, hire a dime-a-dozen comedy director.Also if I were an invester in major motion pictures I wouldn't risk my millions on a director who may have had a few productions that were loosers at the boxoffice just because he directed at least one action film. I think a more conservative (and logical) choice would be to go with someone who is a winner.
You are under the mistaken impression that I care what the movie going public thinks. I only care about my enjoyment. I thought I made that clear? I do not enjoy trash like "Cheaper by the Dozen," and the man who directed that film is not the type of director who would produce a Flash film that I will like. Therefore, he is a poor choice.Perhaps you are one of those who have been misled by silly non-scientific statistics. RottenTomatoes does not sample the true moviegoing population and it is irresponsible to think that film critics actually know the likes and tastes of moviegoers. That website says one thing but the scoreboard (of box office and business results) says another. Now who are you going to believe.
If the film was so great that it transformed millions of people into FF fans (despite the fact that you pulled that number out of your ass), then the comic book would be selling in the millions, no? These fans don't exist, or they'd be buying the comic. They may have liked the movies, but they're not fans.Yes. My kids didn't know about any of the characters until they saw the film and they are fans now. I am sure there are millions of kids that didn't either.
I do. As I have explained, my opinion is the only one that matters. I am not watching the film so WB can make money, and I am certainly not watching the film for the enjoyment of your silly children who like Doom-in-name-only. I'm watching it for my enjoyment. I have a consideration for other comic book fans, because they too respect these characters, but I have no consideration for the thoughts of anyone else.Who says that?
This may shock and amaze you, but some of us feel strongly about these characters. They are important to us. They are not important to Joe Blow who has never read a Fantastic Four comic. Since a properly-written Doom would have had no ill-effect on the box office return of the film, the logical choice is to satisfy we comic book fans, because the general public doesn't care either way.Characters are no more than products to be sold to a market.
But not to my enjoyment, which I have explained is all that matters.Both the success of a film and the enjoyment of the audience are both relevant factors in good filmmaking.
As I said in my previous post, I would rather have a quality film fail commercially, than have a crappy film succeed and spawn sequels. I would have preferred a decent FF film with no sequels to the crappy one when got and it's inevitably crappy sequels.If films stopped being successful, then studios would stop making them, and that would be disappointing.
Yes, he was portrayed as a Luthor clone.I didn't say that. What I did imply was that Dr. Doom should not be a carbon copy of Darth Vader. He was not portaryed as a a Lex Luthor Clone either.
He was ineffectual as a nemesis: he was defeated by a goddamn fire hydrant.The fact that he was portrayed as a wealthy business mogul only indicates that he was a man of power. If he were a common criminal, he would easily be in prison and ineffective as a arch nemisis.
It's not that he had super powers, it's that they are the sole reason he was a formidable opponent. Doom doesn't need super powers to make him great: he makes himself great. The Victor Von Doom in that film was a whiny little priss who was lucky enough to get whacked with cosmic rays. The real Doom is the ultimate self-made man, a man who achieved power through his own effort and intelligence. If I had to sum it up in a single line, I would say that Doom in the comics is a formidable enemy, and Doom in the film was not.As far as him having cosmic mutant powers I look as that as a reinterpetation of the character which is done all the time in the comics.
Ha! You should pay closer attention, then.By my count there were at least 10 versions of Dr. Doom in the comics and nobody has made any significant complaints about that.
Yes. What do I care about the budget limitations? Better filmmakers have made better films with less money.And they only had $100 million and 1 hr and 46 minutes of air time to do it in. You are very demanding with sombody else's money. Aren't you?
That's funny how that is comming to be a standard line nowadays. All I can say to this is if writers and directors had to always stick as closely to the souce material as you would have it, it would limit their creativity, which I think is fundamentally wrong.
I think wanting every single comic book movie to be dark and gritty is just as bad as wanting them all to be fun loving and fancy free. There has to be some kind of balance. Most comic books teeter on the edge of self aware humor and soap opera drama as it is.
I do. As I have explained, my opinion is the only one that matters. I am not watching the film so WB can make money, and I am certainly not watching the film for the enjoyment of your silly children who like Doom-in-name-only. I'm watching it for my enjoyment. I have a consideration for other comic book fans, because they too respect these characters, but I have no consideration for the thoughts of anyone else.
Leave this kind of crap out of your abrasive posts
Very well, but my posts will be abrasive nonetheless.
movies shouldn't be 'light' just to have wider appeal, it should be an accurate translation of the tone of that specific material. this is why I don't like what they did to Ghost Rider. even Fantastic Four, which should be far from a dark film, was turned into something that was stupid for the sake of being even lighter in tone that it needed. unless someone gets Goyers Flash script, we won't know how "dark" it really is. But I think if Levy is borrowing from Goyer's draft for this lighter version, then by lighter I think we're going to get cheesy/stupid humor.
There is no law that says that is the case. You are just stating your own opinion here and that should be clarified. The bottom line here is that the studios should be making films that people want to see and if it can appeal to a wider audience and result in larger box office revenues, then so be it. I think that is the goal here.