Credit
where it is due: the first 30-ish minutes of this film are okay,
averagely decent, passes muster, good enough. Let's face it, if
there's a phrase that characterises Fox superhero movies it's “good
enough”. Their X-Men franchise has run fifteen years on being good
enough. Yes, the characters were a bit light, the plot was a bit
coincidental but a year ago I gave a pass to these guys giving Ellen
Page magical time travel powers and no lines. I was ready for a good
enough film on an X-Men: The Last Stand sort of level.
Then
the Fantastic Four get their powers and it all falls apart. I am not
kidding, there is that clear a dividing line between the good enough
portion of this and the trainwreck portion.
Didn't
matter, I was already obsessed by the chimp at that point. You see,
in this version of events the FF (or, rather, Reed, Johnny, Ben and
Doom) get their powers by jumping in a teleporter they built and
visiting an alien planet. Or an alternate Earth, it's oddly
ambiguous. First, though, they test it by sending a chimp through.
A
CGI chimp. A poorly rendered CGI chimp. And so it was, during the
many moments when my attention began to wander I wondered whether it
was really that prohibitively
expensive to rent a chimp for a day. My friend and I, first thing we
said to one another when the lights came up, was to ask each other
about the chimp.
It's
not even the worst effect in the film. There's an unconvincing tree
at one point. No kidding: there's a green screen effect so bad it
makes a real, living tree look like bad CG.
There
was a groan, an audible group groan in the cinema, when Reed Richards
has the “we're stronger fighting together than separately”
revelation.
If
you've heard bad things about Kate Mara as Sue Storm, I'm telling
you: it's all true. She isn't part of the expedition that gets them
their powers, her own powers are an odd effect of the others coming
back from the expedition. There's even a scene from the trailer which
has been changed for the finished film: instead of using her
forcefield to wreck a whole bunch of transport containers like a bomb
going off the finished product has her barely able to shift two in a
move she clearly has little to no fine control of. Her powers are
barely used except as transport for the two non-flying boys. There is
literally not a single sequence in which she appears that she is not
somehow sidelined. There's one sequence that looks like it might
involve her going off and doing
something but then the heavy lifting gets handed to the Thing and a
six pack of army men.
When
early-60s Sue Storm compares favourably in terms of agency to 2015
Sue Storm, you know you're on to a loser.
What's
more, Fox continues with this bizarre notion they have that Reed,
Doom and Sue need to be a love triangle yet barely commit to it
beyond a single scene in which Doom tries to scare Reed off while
Sue... sits in the background blissfully unaware of this entire plot
strand. Are we really in a place where, as a society, we can't get
together a better modernisation for the origin of a mad scientist
THAN FRAGILE MASCULINE SEXUAL SECURITY!? Especially when the source
material gives us good, old-fashioned hubris and rivalry?
Oh,
the hell with, let's just rail on all the politics: there's an
environmentalist subplot that somehow
justifies Doom wanting to destroy the world; a cartoonishly evil
government man who wants to replicate the FF's empowerment to make
super-soldiers; the fact that this plot involves the Thing taking
human lives is just sort of shoved out there and never addressed;
Doom is an unwashed internet activist stereotype when he first turns
up but his personal politics don't actually seem to extend much
beyond moody nihilism except here and there he has a plot-convenient
spirit of exploration about him.
Consistency
would be nice. This is a short bloody film and Doom disappears for a
third of it, giving him a consistent character shouldn't be that
hard. When he does reappear, having been abandoned for a year on the
alternate Earth/alien planet he has ALL THE POWERS! He can kill
people with a look just so long as they aren't important to the plot
and shape the alien/alternate world to his will so long as it
wouldn't protect him from taking a punch.
He
is literally defeated because Reed Richards, super genius, works out
that all four of them hitting him together is more effective than
hitting him separately. Cue audience groaning.
So
Doom can't settle on a personality; Reed has no recognisable
emotions; Sue has nothing to do; Ben has none of the personality that
usually allows him to cope with his condition; and Johnny...
honestly, Michael B. Jordan ain't bad but he just isn't given the
material. No one is. None of the character interactions really come
off: Ben and Reed's friendship, as adults, is strangely sterile; Reed
and Sue flirt once in lieu of anything resembling human interactions;
Ben and Johnny's first actual conversation is in the final bloody
scene; endless potential existed in exploring an uncommon sibling
dynamic in a continuity where Sue is Johnny's adopted and more
accomplished sibling yet it is never exploited; Doom and Reed's
friendship is set up in a fun little montage of the group eating
takeaway but is, again, never explored; and, I've already ranted
about the anaemic wretchedness that is Fox's latest attempt to boil
Doom's motivation down to feeling cuckolded.
Don't
see this movie. Just don't. It isn't even a fun bad movie. A fun bad
movie has to made in good faith with the actual ambition, misguided
as it may be, that what is being made is going to be great. This has
no ambition beyond merely existing to satisfy a contract. It didn't
need to be good, it just needed to be made cheaply and that is
achieved by having a middle third of it in which nothing happens at
all. Just endless scenes of Vancouver forests and underground bunkers
in which the cast think seriously about maybe having a character
moment if they feel like it.
3 comments:
I do not plan to see this movie ever, unless it is on regular television in five years, and we all plan to get drunk and yell at the screen.
Sue doesn't even go get bombarded by cosmic rays? A love triangle with Doom and Reed? Funny, I thought it was Namor and Reed.
Speaking of which, I'd love to see a Fantastic Four movie with Namor!
Sadly, someone else owns Namor. They sold off his movie rights separately for some odd reason. I think Universal owns him.
I don't know why they did this horrible thing to Doom twice, I really don't.
Doom is a great villain. He is THE villain when it comes to Marvel. And for some reason, they just can't seem to translate that to movies. His own origin story is amazing...heck they could make a movie just about that!
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