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The official story wavers, depending on which version you listen to. What is generally agreed upon is that either (a) the movie was made just because the rights to the intellectual property would’ve expired otherwise, so it bought more time to make a good FF flick for whoever owned it, or (b) it was made, but not funded nearly enough for the quality it deserved, and the studios deliberately mothballed it rather than get a critical drubbing over its release. Since there were actual marketing efforts around 1994 to get the word out about FF, I’m going with "B" here. The movie was made for a tad under $2 million — I heard $1.6 somewhere — and it shows, particularly in set design and special effects. It definitely deserved more, particularly considering the subject matter. $2 million might cover an Alpo dog food commercial nowadays, but that’s about it. However, if you look at it from a glass-half-full-of-poison perspective, they actually did a fairly entertaining job of stretching that budget (no pun intended) and made something that did earn the right to be seen somewhere at some point. But nope, no video release, not even on TV. Nada. Enough of dat. We gots some movie to clobber! After the rout in the theater battle of ‘05, where the new and fancy-pants version of Fantastic Four broke the morale of critic soldiers and sent us screaming for the rear lines, it was downright refreshing to partake of a simpler yet kookier version of this superhero team. Honestly? It’s even a better movie in most respects, offering heapings of humor (both intentional and "Hey Jerry, you gotta come over to my place quick, there’s something we gotta point at and laugh at together like the hearty folk we are!") and a strong streak of faithfulness to the original source material (even more original than the 2005 version, natch). Don’t get me wrong, it’s nothing that I’m gonna marry any time soon, but everyone sort of expects this to be absolutely rancid from the whole never-released-anywhere legend, and the truth is that Fantastic Four is neither so bad, nor so good as to warrant any sort of extreme statement. Statements! To the extreme! The movie begins with both Reed/Mr. Fantastic and Victor von Doom/Dr. Doom in college, performing elaborate experiments with classic Star Trek series equipment on some sort of traveling space phenomena known as "Colossus". Doom gets horribly burned and is thought dead, but Reed goes about with his life just ducky. Ten years later, Reed gets ready for another experiment on Colossus, and enlists his friend Ben Grimm/The Thing to pilot his shuttle, and drags along two decidedly non-astronauts-nor-scientists in the form of brother/sister Sue Storm/Invisible Girl and Johnny Storm/Human Torch. Through the magic of cheap special effects and quick editing, they go into space and have some sort of bad accident that crash lands them to earth with new super powers. Mr. Fantastic can once in a while stretch his arm or leg really long, along with whatever super-stretchy outfit he’s wearing that day. Invisible Girl gets the cheapest effect, with the SFX crew just wiping away half of her body or not showing anything and then just having her talk from behind the camera. Human Torch gets the ability to light his hand on fire and shoot fire beams (?), but he’s kind of freaked out by being on fire, as we would reasonably expect. And The Thing turns into a really spiffy-looking critter who tends to walk through posterboard walls at the drop of a hat. Their main conflict in the film comes from two baddies: Dr. Doom, who somewhat shoots electricity and overacts with his arms like he’s a grounded hummingbird, and The Jeweler, a guy obsessed with jewels and keeps in his pay a whole slew of homeless people in the sewer. ‘Cause that’s where the homeless live. And they are there to do your bidding. The Jeweler wants to kidnap Thing’s blind girlfriend to make her his "queen", and Doom wants to build some sort of vague laser to blow up stuff with. Good thing we have a brand new supergroup to deal with it all! I’m not going to brush over the bad parts here — this is ideal if you wanted to get a movie mocking party going with some witty and loud friends. The acting is for the most part atrocious, almost deliberately so; I’m not sure if they were attempting to really step up the camp factor here, but everyone doesn’t act even remotely like normal people. Reed is a whole lot more likable than his 2005 counterpart, although Johnny (to balance things out) is hyper-spastically annoying. At many points in the movie, significant details are brushed over and time flashes forward in weird bursts (after their crash, the FanFour are brought to what they think is a normal military medical installation for tests, but it takes them forever to figure out that it’s actually Doom’s base, because I think the filmmakers made that last detail up toward the end just to not have to worry about making the team travel much). There is much to be praised, as long as we’re just looking at it for entertainment and not as any definitive treatise on Marvel comic legends. The score is very well-done, some hybrid of Superman and Jurassic Park, for starters. The Thing’s makeup and facial expressions reminded me a lot (in a good way) of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and their outfits. There’s quite a few funny moments and even exciting ones, as long as you’re willing to keep expectations low — the team taking out a whole room of gun-toting goons is the highlight. Even the romance here between Reed and Sue is more believable than the awkward, Alba-laced 2005 version, which maybe isn’t saying much. See, I love campy stuff, and campy superhero flicks done on a shoestring budget aren’t as common as you might think. For that, I thank Fantastic Four for being my FF entertainment of choice. Flame on!
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Unnecessary Background
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Currently rivals the The Star Wars Holiday Special as the most popular bootlegged film among comic and sci-fi fans. Interestingly, like the Star Wars special, it is also roundly despised by those very fans as well as it own creators. Groovy Quotes
Reed: We’re… fine? Doesn’t that bother anyone, just a little?
The Thing: I love walking into a trap, don't you?
The Thing: It's clobberin' time! Human Torch: Flame on!
Mr. Fantastic: I think it's made us feel that our worst character defects are in fact our greatest strengths.
Mom: Look at you... the fantastic four! (music swells) Soundtrack Review
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This review page was last updated on 8.19.05 MRFH Home . Reviews . Findaflik . Features! . MRFH Forum © 2005 Mutant Reviewers From Hell (Original Content). All Rights Reserved. |