I'm a little tired of super-hero origin stories, but I enjoyed the other Fantastic Four movies, so I'll probably go see this one at the theater. It debuts on my birthday, and that would be a great birthday present for my family to go see it with me. Or maybe I'll wait a week or two, so the lines won't be as long. Either way, this teaser trailer looks pretty cool:
The late, great Roger Ebert, whom I usually agree with, gave the 2005 Fantastic Four film a brutal (and undeserved, in my opinion) one-star rating. Here's that review:
So
you get in a spaceship, and you venture into orbit to research a mysterious
star storm hurtling toward Earth. There's a theory it may involve properties of
use to man. The spaceship is equipped with a shield to protect its passengers
from harmful effects, but the storm arrives ahead of schedule and saturates
everybody on board with unexplained but powerful energy that creates radical
molecular changes in their bodies.
They return safety to Earth, only to discover that Reed Richards (Ioan Gruffudd), the leader of the group, has a body that can take any form or stretch to unimaginable lengths. Call him Mr. Fantastic. Ben Grimm (Michael Chiklis) develops superhuman powers in a vast and bulky body that seems made of stone. Call him the Thing. Sue Storm (Jessica Alba) can become invisible at will and generate force fields that can contain propane explosions, in case you have a propane explosion that needs containing but want the option of being invisible. Call her Invisible Woman. And her brother Johnny Storm (Chris Evans) has a body that can burn at supernova temperatures. Call him the Human Torch.
I
almost forgot the villain, Victor Von Doom (Julian McMahon), who becomes Dr.
Doom and wants to use the properties of the star storm and the powers of the
Fantastic Four for his own purposes. He eventually becomes metallic.
By
this point in the review, are you growing a little restless? What am I gonna
do, list names and actors and superpowers and nicknames forever? That's how the
movie feels.
It's
all setup and demonstration, and naming and discussing and demonstrating, and
it never digests the complications of the Fantastic Four and gets on to telling
a compelling story. Sure, there's a nice sequence where the Thing keeps a fire
truck from falling off a bridge, but you see one fire truck saved from falling
off a bridge, you've seen them all.
The
Fantastic Four are, in short, underwhelming. The edges kind of blur between
them and other superhero teams. That's understandable. How many people could
pass a test right now on who the X-Men are and what their powers are? Or would
want to? I wasn't watching "Fantastic Four" to study it, but to be
entertained by it, but how could I be amazed by a movie that makes its own
characters so indifferent about themselves?
The
Human Torch, to repeat, can burn at supernova temperatures! He can become so
hot, indeed, that he could threaten the very existence of the Earth itself!
This is absolutely stupendously amazing, wouldn't you agree? If you could burn
at supernova temperatures, would you be able to stop talking about it? I know
people who won't shut up about winning 50 bucks in the lottery.
But
after Johnny Storm finds out he has become the Human Torch, he takes it pretty
much in stride, showing off a little by setting his thumb on fire. Later he
saves the Earth, while Invisible Woman simultaneously contains his supernova so
he doesn't destroy it. That means Invisible Woman could maybe create a force
field to contain the sun, which would be a big deal, but she's too distracted
to explore the possibilities; she gets uptight because she will have to be
naked to be invisible, because otherwise people could see her empty clothes; it
is no consolation to her that invisible nudity is more of a metaphysical
concept than a condition.
Are
these people complete idiots? The entire nature of their existence has
radically changed, and they're about as excited as if they got a makeover on
"Oprah." The exception is Ben Grimm, as the Thing, who gets depressed
when he looks in the mirror. Unlike the others, who look normal except when
actually exhibiting superpowers, he looks like - well, he looks like his suits
would fit The Hulk, just as the Human Torch looks like The Flash, and the
Invisible Woman reminds me of Storm in "X-Men."
Is
this the road company? Thing clomps around on his Size 18 boulders and feels
like an outcast until he meets a blind woman named Alicia (Kerry Washington)
who loves him, in part because she can't see him. But the Thing looks like Don
Rickles crossed with Mt. Rushmore; he has a body that feels like a driveway and
a face with crevices you could hide a toothbrush in. Alicia tenderly feels his
face with her fingers, like blind people often do while falling in love in the
movies, and I guess she likes what she feels. Maybe she's extrapolating.
The
story involves Dr. Doom's plot to ... but perhaps we need not concern ourselves
with the plot of the movie, since it is undermined at every moment by the
unwieldy need to involve a screenful of characters, who, despite the most
astonishing powers, have not been made exciting or even interesting. The X-Men
are major league compared to them.
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