by Victor Yap
Pix Credit:http: www.filmofilia.com |
Avengers Assemble! Who’s excited about
the Avengers movie? That one could be the ultimate comic book movie crossover,
getting (almost) all the prime Marvel movie superheroes in one flick.
This is nothing new, though, as movies
based on superhero comic books have been around for a while. Superman’s
animated shorts were screened in cinemas starting 1941-43 and the first
recognised Marvel film was the Captain America serial in 1944.
However, it must be said that this new
surge of popularity is a new age of superhero films. Throughout the ‘90s, comic
book movies had a bunch of hits and misses, creating cult-classics, popular
franchises as well as flops as the years went on.
What started it all was the 1978
Superman film, the platform that catapulted the Man of Steel into Hollywood and
encouraged the studio to produce a few sequels after. Tim Burton’s Batman films
came out almost 10 years after that and reinforced the idea that comics make
good movies.
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This resulted in a mix bag of terrible,
good, and great movies that were inspired, adapted or made from comics. The
trend at time was mediocre and there was no real demand for comic book films.
Movies like Spawn and Blade turned the
trend around as it re-enact the original source material in the movie and
stayed true to the characters portrayed on film
By being faithful to the comics and only
adding changes where it is needed as well as giving it the appropriate
Hollywood treatment ensured the two films would do well at the box-office and
generate favourable response among fans.
The formula that these two successful
comic films have set is not the ultimate strategy, however, as some titles that
followed the formula still failed spectacularly. This includes the Spawn
sequels, Marvel’s Daredevil, Ghost Rider, and The Hulk (the Ang Lee one), and
the 2003 Punisher as well as many others that fizzled prematurely at the
cinemas.
Here are some comic book movies that got
it right and made it really big:
- Spiderman (2002): Tobey Maguire
defined Peter Parker and brought the teenage hero closer to fans and a whole
new group of audience through the big screen.
- Batman Begins (2005): Chrisopher
Nolan’s reimagining of the Dark Knight set the benchmark for many comic book
movies to follow.
- X-Men (2000): While the origins and
backstory is completely different from the comics, it created a new franchise
that inspired a new comic series for the X-teams, and reinforced the push for
the re-creation of the Marvel Universe to become grittier and more gruesome.
- Fantastic Four (2005): Marvel’s First
Family makes it to big screen and left its mark as the film to focus on four
separate heroes working together and make the sizzling hot Jessica Alba
comically strip on screen.
- Iron Man (2008): Robert Downey Jr. is
Tony Stark and Iron Man … ‘nuff said.
- Popular non-mainstream comics: Wanted,
Scott Pilgrim VS The World, 300, Kick-Ass, and Watchmen.
- Captain America (2011): The
Star-Spangled Hero needed a movie of his own and he got it in spades thanks to
the creative mind of its director Joe Johnston.
- Thor (2011): Another film that created
its own origins for the character but still managing to do it well and stay
strong in the box office.
Comic films that flopped commercially,
even with big name stars headlining it, are thankfully not in abundance. Movies
like Catwoman, The Punisher, and Elektra.
Pix Credit: www.ioffer.com |
This futile effort showed movie studios
that character spin-offs is not necessarily a good thing. As such they turned
to sequels and believed that is the way they can cash in on the demand for
comic films. This includes:
- The Dark Knight: Heath Ledger
re-defined the Joker as a dark, classy fellow and was responsible for making
the film even darker than it could ever be.
- Iron Man 2: More Tony Stark but with
triple armour-filled fun!
- Spiderman 2 & 3: Great takes on
some of Spidey’s major storylines but still falling short of the first film.
Many prefer the second film of the two, hailing it as the best of all three
Spiderman films.
- X-Men 2 & 3: While both were
box-office successes, the third film falls short of fans’ expectations. It
doesn’t help the X-film franchise gave birth to a few more movie projects that
work to deviate the movie continuity from the source material.
As sequels start to lose its appeal, the
idea of rebooting the comic film franchise came up and is making its rounds
around Hollywood now. The Incredible Hulk is one such example of a successful
reboot and has spurred Marvel to consider other projects for the same
treatment.
Marvel’s latest X-film, X-Men: First
Class, is somewhat of a reboot, while Nolan’s Batman trilogy can be considered
a full reboot from Tim Burton’s films while Bryan Singer’s Superman Returns is
a reboot to the third and fourth film from the ’80, acting as a sequel to the
original two.
For now there are two other reboots being
filmed and are planned for a 2012 release: The Amazing Spiderman and Man of
Steel (Superman). More great movies are being produced for the coming year with
most of them being sourced from the comic industry. It seems like a renaissance
is coming and the comic kings can only smile at this surprising turn of events.
1 comments:
Anon said...
Lol! Clicked on da Catwoman link!!!! XD