Why not? General audiences accept a nobleman fighting crime in the woods with Robin Hood.Motown Marvel said:defenitely gotta go over the origin. a general audience isnt gonna buy a billionaire with a robin hood complex jumping around on rooftops fighting crime without a solid origin to back it up.
GL's Light said:Yes to a Green Arrow film for me.![]()
Keep the budget in the $ 40 million range, release it in March or April.
Danny Boyle would be a good choice for the director's chair, or it could be a comeback vehicle for Stephen Norrington. LXG was very disappointing, but Norrington deserves another crack, and GA would be a more manageable project than LXG. Zach Snyder would do a great job, too.
I'd have Ollie and Dinah both feature (Dinah wouldn't have her sonic powers, she'd just be a kick-ass martial artist). A big affirmative to GA using trick arrows.
I wouldn't go too grim 'n gritty with the tone. No The Longbow Hunters/Dinah tortured/Ollie kills people kind of stuff. The film should have a good mix of seriousness and whimsy.
I liked it, too. I have the graphic novel, but I don't think it's the best way to go with a GA film. I think most superhero films should be serious and weighty enough to entertain adults, but still accessible to children.dnno1 said:I liked "The Longbow Hunters".
Hypestyle said:So, should the film get into his origin, or jump straight into the story? I'd vote for the latter.. Also, I'm not a GA scholar, so who are his villains?
Manic said:Why not? General audiences accept a nobleman fighting crime in the woods with Robin Hood.
What part of his origin explains why he dresses up like Robin Hood? I've never known a reason for him to pick that ridiculous medieval theme; I just suspended my disbelief enough to accept it.Motown Marvel said:medieval nobleman jives well with the idea of chivalry and fighting for your beliefs. that idea works fine with the time period its set in. but in a modern world and setting, why would a billionaire dress up like a character from a medieval folk tale and fight crime with a bow and arrow when he could just as easily and effectively do it in a far less ridiculous, preposterous, and extreme way? all that comes from the origin.
Manic said:What part of his origin explains why he dresses up like Robin Hood? I've never known a reason for him to pick that ridiculous medieval theme; I just suspended my disbelief enough to accept it.
Ollie Queen isn't Bruce Wayne. He doesn't have some tragic, life-changing origin that inspired him to pick a persona that'll strike fear into criminals. He's an idealistic fighter for the little guy. You don't need to see him honing his archery skills to accept that. That's just the way he thinks.
The only thing his origin could explain is why he's so damned good at what he does. And as I said earlier, they can go over that briefly.
ShadowBoxing said:As with any and all characters: there is a story there.
The Question, Captain Atom, Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Iron Fist, Red Wolf, heck even Son of Satan all have the potential as movie properties. Blade stands as proof of this, that you can take a character even as obscure as him and market it. The question with Green Arrow is how good would the movie be done, and I think in all likelyhood the story would be either another "catwoman" or could be treated well as a more Indie type film (something allong the lines of Collateral or Momento in tone). However chances are it would go the way of a catwoman and be destroyed in the process.
Batman said:Green Arrow has plenty of rogues.
None of the above:
Drakon (One of the top 5 martial artists on Earth)
Onomatopeia (Uses guns and acrobatic skills)
The Riddler (Genius that delivers riddles to opponents foreseeing crimes out of a psychotic fixation)