In addition, the studio has taken a leaf from Sony's playbook for The Amazing Spider-Man franchise and staked out a July 14th, 2017 date for Fantastic Four 2 - even as Trank's reboot is in the process of finalizing its cast roster ahead of principal photography getting underway within a month or two.īeyond that, the studio has staked out July 13th, 2018 as the release date for a currently under-wraps Marvel film. the sequel to The Wolverine - is the one that's been showing the most signs of activity in recent months, with director James Mangold having just announced this past week that he anticipates production getting started after Apocalypse is finished.įox has now made that official, having announced a March 3rd, 2017 release date for Mangold's next Wolverine installment - one that could conceivably be star Hugh Jackman's final outing as the metal-clawed Logan, no less. There are a handful of additional X-Men project is some stage of development right now, though Wolverine 3 - a.k.a.
What we're left with is an exercise in "what could have been" and another superhero movie with promising aspects that simply did not click.20th Century Fox's roadmap for its Marvel Film Universe over the next few years includes Bryan Singer's X-Men: Days of Future Past - which unites the older present-day X-Men trilogy and younger X-Men: First Class casts - arriving this May, Josh Trank's Fantastic Four reboot releasing in 2015, and then X-Men: Apocalypse (the conclusion to the First Class trilogy) hitting theaters in 2016. Fantastic Four is more realistic and immersive than the other two adaptations, but unfortunately not as fun as either. What we're left with is a promising set-up and a complete mess of a third act with potential bleeding out right up until the final frames.
It's obvious Trank had a vision with this world, and it's a damn shame that we won't be able to see it in full effect. Again, these are simply hints of what the movie could've been. The CGI as a whole is great - a few moments will leave you scratching your head as in "was that really necessary?" but for the most part, the alternate dimension looks fantastic and the few fight scenes there are (literally only two or three) are executed well. Once I got past the fact that it wasn't the comic book's adaptation of "Doctor Doom" and took him at face value as a sci-fi villain, I thought he worked wonders and actually posed a genuine threat to humanity. They worked well together and had palpable chemistry for a good chunk of the movie. Miles Teller and the rest of the cast have the benefit of being immensely likable. The shift is so drastic it's as if they Frankenstein'd two separate movies together, making for one extremely disjointed watching experience. The climax is generic and lackluster, and the believable shaky chemistry the characters shared in the beginning of the movie becomes incredibly forced and awkward. Mind you, I was still pulling for the heroes the entire time, but the moments following, preceding and including the final confrontation are so forcefully rushed and haphazardly put together it completely disconnects you from what the first hour of the movie set-up. It turns from this relatively dark, stylish superhero drama to an overblown one-liner infested CGI-fest. Apparently the producers demanded reshoots which rear their ugly head about 20 minutes from the end. I can't blame Trank for the discrepancies I have with the movie because he is not at fault. The characters are more relatable, their situations are more believable, and for a good part of the movie, it actually feels like you're watching the true Fantastic Four origin story unfold. It has a darker tone than the other movies and is a wildly different experience because of it.
Josh Trank's Fantastic Four is grounded in relative realism, showing what would likely happen if people did in fact crack inter-dimensional travel and brought back superpowers. I was a huge skeptic when the first trailer came out thinking it would be another FF movie chock full of cheesy one-liners and cartoony humor.
I wasn't expecting to enjoy this movie at all.