by Nicholas Lemieux
Ah yes, the Fantastic Four, Marvel’s first-ever comic
book superheroes. Before Spider-Man, the X-Men and even the Avengers, the
Fantastic Four were Marvel’s first proper entry into the superhero franchise,
and yet today, now that these comic books are entering the cinematic age, are
commonly looked down upon and overshadowed by their sibling properties. In
light of Disney’s recent acquisition of 21st Century Fox and most of
its assets, including the rights of the Fantastic Four, this article will
examine the tumultuous and haphazard film history of the Fantastic Four and
whether or not there is a bright spot for the franchise in the future.
Strangely enough, the first Fantastic Four film ever
produced was never even released in the form of 1994’s low-budget The Fantastic Four. In 1992, the Four’s
film rights were held by the Constantin Film production franchise, but they
were about to lose said rights unless they began production by December of that
year. Due to the limited time needed to properly kickstart the film and since
both the budget and the technology necessary for such a venture were lacking at
the time, they instead opted to do a very low-budget $1 million film
produced by Roger Corman filled with cheap effects, corny writing and campy
acting. Although the film was never released, due to fears from Marvel that it
would cheapen the franchise’s monetary value, bootleg copies soon began to
circulate over the next few years and the film promptly became a mild Cult hit,
well-known as a “so bad it’s good”
movie a la The Room. Today the film
is little known, asides from being a running gag on Arrested Development Season 4 when Tobias meets a drug addict who
played Invisible Woman in that film. Ironically enough, one could argue that
this film, in all its corniness, was perhaps the closest in all the films in
recapturing the heart and charm of the original comic book, even if you ignore
the terrible CGI.
In 2004, the rights to the Four were brought by Fox who
instantly green lit a reboot. A short-lived film series promptly sprung up in
the mid 2000’s in the form of 2005’s Fantastic
Four and its 2007 sequel Rise of the
Silver Surfer. With a much bigger
budget and a cast with great potential, including future Captain America
himself Chris Evans as Human Torch, the films had great potential and yet were
more or less a disappointment. The films made an adequate earning at the box
office but received mainly negative reviews particularly for its lack of charm
and heart and overall unlikeable main characters, who for a majority of the
first film show no interest in using their powers for good. Its sequel is also
notorious for featuring Galactus, probably one of the most powerful and
threatening villains in the entire Marvel universe, as a stormy cloud. Very
threatening indeed.
Shortly afterwards, Fox started development on a
reboot of the franchise directed by up-and-coming filmmaker Josh Trank, who had
prior directed the hit Sc-Fi movie Chronicle,
who had a vision of forming a more darker and grittier tone for the franchise. Fantastic
Four 2015 or Fant4stic as it was
so cleverly stylized went through an...intriguing production to say the least. Namely,
reports from the set indicates that Trank had poor relations with the cast and crew, reportedly
prone to erratic and isolated behaviour, constantly arguing with the crew,
abusing the production budget (Fox gave the film a budget of $120 million when
Trank thought he was given $150 million to work with, leading to several action
scenes being cut) and apparently causing extensive damage to the rental home he
stayed in during production. Midway through production, reshoots were ordered
by Fox who apparently weren’t satisfied with the final product of the film, resulting
in Trank’s script becoming excessively rewritten and also resulting in his removal
from the editing of the final cut. Reportedly, reshoots lasted until May 2015, three whole months before the final
product was to be released.
The night before the film’s premiere, Trank posted a
message on Twitter that he quickly deleted, writing “A year ago, I had a
fantastic version of this. And it would've received great reviews. You'll
probably never see it. That's reality though." Suffice to say, when Fant4stic was released, it was a major
critical and commercial failure, grossing only $168 million on its already
extended $150 million budget and receiving universal negative reviews from
audiences and critics alike, gaining only 9% on Rotten Tomatoes and winning
three awards at the Golden Raspberry Awards. A planned sequel to this reboot
was promptly cancelled and once again the Fantastic Four’s film franchise fell
into a state of Limbo.
However, all that changed in December of last year,
following Disney’s acquisition of a large position of Fox’s entertainment
assets. Among the specifics of the deal was that the film rights of the
Fantastic Four, as well as those of fellow Marvel superhero team the X-Men,
would revert back to Marvel. As of now, whilst there are currently plans to
incorporate both brands into Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe, it’ll be quite
some time before we see another Fantastic Four film hit cinemas, especially
considering how tainted their brand is currently. We’ll get a good Fantastic Four film one day,
one not too campy, mean-spirited or overly serious, but just simple yet
charming. Disney and Sony’s deal with Spider-Man after the failure of The Amazing Spider-Man series had a big
payoff with the financially and critically successful Spider-Man: Homecoming so it’s definitely not too far-fetched to
imagine something similar will happen to the Four.
We’ll get a good Fantastic Four film one day, and
when it comes out it’ll be...Fant4stic.
Comments
Post a Comment
Comments with names are more likely to be published.