Anyone seen this apparent trainwreck yet?

Moderator: NecronLord
Heh, just been getting into MovieBob lately and saw that...his Pixels review is legend
In case you've been living under a rock, the new “Fantastic Four” movie isn’t doing too hot. Our own critic — Drew McWeeny — found it mediocre at best, which is almost the nicest thing you can find to say about Fox’s third attempt at capturing the essence of this superhero team.
As of this writing, the film as an abysmal Rotten Tomatoes score:
Of course, everyone involved seemed to have been bracing for impact. When Miles Teller (Mr. Fantastic) is using talking points like “These films don't do well with critics,” that's a veritable canary in a coal mine. But no one expected director Josh Trank to do this:
Talk about backpedaling. You can almost hear the cartoonish screech of tires as Trank peels out. Wow.A year ago I had a fantastic version of this. And it would've recieved great reviews. You’ll probably never see it. That’s reality though.
— Josh Trank (@joshuatrank) August 7, 2015
It took approximately zero minutes for the tweet to disappear from Trank's Twitter timeline, but it was too late. Screenshots are forever.
I wouldn't, how many chances has Fox had to make a good FF4 movie. I don't want them to keep the rights to this franchise when they've clearly shown that they don't actually give enough of a shit about it to make a good movie.Bedlam wrote:On that front I would support a sequel even if this film bombs as otherwise it's entirely wasted effort.
I'm not entirely sure... but I think he said
Ah, right - back in my day we didn't have the internet. In fact, I remember before buying or renting movies was a thing.Jub wrote:I can say that I've never bought or rented a movie just for T&A. I'd generally say that's what the internet is for.
I hear it quite negatively compared to the prior F4 movies, which fall into the 'bashed but you can have fun' category.The Romulan Republic wrote:I'm tempted to see it because I suspect that the hostility toward it is overblown. Their are a lot of other movies that the internet nerd community heavily bashed which were pretty enjoyable. I might be wrong, but I feel like I've seen this shit before.
Because if you're making a direct adaptation and not a spiritual successor, your first thought should be "If the source material does not make a good film, how little do I need to change and still make a good film?"The Romulan Republic wrote:What exactly made that obvious to someone who hasn't seen the movie and hasn't read all of the comics?