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Fantastic Four
Reviewed by Rich Drees
When a comic book film fails, it is sometimes because the filmmakers
stray too far from the source material (see last summer’s
Catwoman), losing what gave the characters their appeal and
alienating the already built-in audience of comic book fans. Other
times, these films don’t work for a variety of the same reasons that
other movies fail - from poor performances to uninspired direction
or a bad script. While Fantastic Four, an adaptation of the
40-years plus old comic book series, doesn’t completely fail as a
movie, it does contain many of the elements often found in other
comic book movie bombs.
After a freak “cosmic storm” sweeps across a research space station,
the five scientists on board find themselves changed. Reed Richards
(Ioan Gruffudd) finds he can stretch his body to incredible lengths,
Sue Storm (Jessica Alba) has the power to turn invisible and project
forcefields while her brother Johnny (Chris Evans) can become a
living man of fire. While their friend Ben Grimm (Michael Chiklis)
has gained superhuman strength, his skin has also been transformed
into a hard, rock-like substance. The fifth scientist, and financial
backer of the expedition, Victor Von Doom (Julian McMahon) finds
that hi skin is slowly turning metallic and he has the power to
throw lightening bolts. When Reed, Sue, Johnny and Ben save a
firetruck from falling off of a bridge, they find themselves
reluctant media stars. Victor, however, finds that the accident on
board the space station has given his business opponents the
leverage they need to wrest his company from him. Faced with
bankruptcy and his own horror at the changes he is going through,
Victor sets out to kill the four.
Comics fans will be glad to know that the movie does capture some
elements of the comic books fairly well. The rivalry between Johnny
and Ben plays out nicely, especially in a scene involving Johnny’s
sports car. Evans and Chiklis also handle their solo scenes their
characters have with equal aplomb. There are numerous small moments
that should have comics fans smiling while still playing well to the
uninitiated.
However, for every moment where the film succeeds as either an
adaptation of the comics or on its own as a movie, there are at
least an equal number of instances where it fails. Gruffudd and
McMahon do an adequate job as rivals Reed and Victor, though the
script never really gives their relationship a real meaty moment.
Alba is the real weak link in the cast, never really showing us why
Reed would hold a torch for her the years they were apart. We are
told that she is an accomplished geneticist, but Alba’s Sue never
exudes anything that would make us believe that she was of that
intellectual level. Instead, she comes off as the worst cast sexy
scientist since Denise Richards’s bimbo nuclear physicist in the
James Bond film The World Is Not Enough (1999).
The screenplay, which had gone through numerous drafts over the
years the film was in development, feels over-scripted - from
working over time to connect all five main characters at the
beginning with a multitude of tangled backstory to the numerous
“coincidences” that seem designed strictly to move the plot and
characters along to the next place they need to be. There are also a
few déjà vu moments in the film. A story point near the end is
lifted from (and done better by) Superman II (1980), while
the film’s final moments want to suggest a sequel but only succeeds
in recalling a similar dénouement from Raiders Of The Lost Ark
(1981).
For a summer blockbuster about superpowered beings, there are very
few action set pieces to show them in action. In fact, there’s a
grand total of two: the bridge rescue sequence and the final
confrontation with Victor Von Doom. Unfortunately, Tim Story, who
has previously directed the similarly lackluster action/comedy
Taxi (2004), seems to have no discernable visual style. The
action sequences are rather blandly presented and, with the
exception of a few short moments, don’t impart any thrills. Compared
to similar sequences presented by Sam Raimi in the Spiderman
films or Mark Steven Johnson in the otherwise mediocre Daredevil
(2003), the action in Fantastic Four is just second-rate.
As fun, escapist summer fare, Fantastic Four is not
fantastic, just barely adequate. |