You could've knocked me over with a feather. You've never seen an issue with these films. Even now with Dark Phoenix crashing and burning spectacularly, here you still are, explaining away what the rest of us supposedly don't see.
So pardon me if I'm not surprised you are making excuses for it.
I'm not making excuses for it. I'm not sure why you feel the need to be so hyperbolic and rude.
I'm just stating the obvious. This movie's production was compromised. There are realities of studio driven films. Some filmmakers have more control than others.
Perhaps a studio wouldn't give "that much control" to a first time director, but to Fox Kinberg isn't simply some journey man first time director is he?
No, he's not a complete unknown to them, and them knowing him is probably why he got the job over more established filmmakers. But in part because he ISN'T an established director, he is someone they likely exerted enough control over to compress a two film vision into one film, etc, etc, etc.
To the studio execs, he's been with this franchise shortly after X2 came out (thank god he was never allowed near that movie), banging out a script for X3 with Penn since around 2004. He's good friends with headhonchos at Fox (Snyder and Watts), he has A-list movie stars name-dropping him, he's been one of the more pre-eminent Producers in the business and a go-to script doctor, commanding $400,000 a week doing re-writes (god knows what possessed these studios to trust a man with barely a good script to his name) and has produced the new batch of films in this franchise. Fox trusted him enough to oversee Fan4stic when its director fizzled out, allowing him to direct in his absence.
But again, he was probably trusted to "direct" Fantastic Four because he's someone they could exert some control over. You don't hire hired guns to do their own thing most of the time.
So no, this whole "they didn't give him that much control" narrative doesn't fly. Somewhere Josh Trank* is having his last laugh. If only he had as fervent defenders that Kinberg seems to have. He probably didn't have to tweet out that infamous tweet. Everyone else would have tweeted it for him!
Trank had plenty of people, including those in the industry, who recognized that his vision was compromised.
It's quite clear that THIS movie's original vision was also compromised, that the film was mandated to be shorter if nothing else, and that it was likely seriously altered after test screenings. I'm not disputing Kinberg's involvement, but that sort of thing tends to be a studio move, and it's a Fox move, and I think we all know that.
I get that you hate Kinberg on principal. I'm not defending his filmography, or the quality of the final product, but all signs point to the production of this film being compromised in some capacity. That's all I'm saying, and I'm hardly the only one doing so. Including a number of articles, who again, are essentIally just stating the obvious and not exactly breaking new ground in doing so.