Riding The Wave Of Success - An FF2 Analysis - SpoilerishRiding the wave of success
The Fantastic Four return for a sequel with the Silver Surfer on board
BY TOM ROSTON
Los Angeles Times
June 10, 2007
VANCOUVER, Canada
There he was, seemingly just another perpetual adolescent, gleefully flipping through the pages of a comic book at Comics Ink in Culver City, Calif. But director Tim Story was doing more than merely getting his comic book jones on; he was on a market-research expedition in July 2005, one that would help lay the foundation for Friday's 20th Century Fox summer tent-pole movie, "Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer."
"Somebody came in
and started talking: 'So what did you think about "Fantastic Four"?'," recalls Story on a rainy November morning here, as he munches on snow peas and rolls of sliced turkey between takes on the set of "Silver Surfer." Speaking with Zen-like calm, Story doesn't throw his weight around like the man in charge on this massive production that takes up three football fields' worth of hangars. So it's also easy to see how Story could go unnoticed at that comic book store as the customers began chatting about his "The Fantastic Four."
"One guy goes, 'Oh, it was terrible,' and starts going off on that theme. And the guy behind the counter was like, 'Well, I don't think so.' And before you knew it, four other guys joined in, and I sat there in one of the aisles and was able to hear what they thought the weaknesses and strengths of it were."
That was just two weeks after the release of Story's unlikely 2005 box-office hit, which opened with a $56-million domestic weekend and topped out at $329 million worldwide. A new franchise was born. Yet because the movie was almost universally panned by critics (one referred to it as a "mild summertime diversion") and a good share of comic book fans, Story is that unusual species of director delivering a sequel to his success in an almost defensive crouch.
"I'll be the first to say that before I was able to get enough of the audience response, I was pretty down on myself about what it was," Story says of the first movie. "I didn't have a chance to do all the things that I wanted to do with it. And later on, I had to realize that the audiences had a fun time."
In Story's research, which included setting up a MySpace page to invite discussion about the first film, the director learned two major things he would need for the next movie.
"I want to be sure that in this one, we have enough action for the fanboys," he says. "And most importantly, I want Doom to really be the badass and the cool villain that I think he can be."
On the 49th day of a 75-day shoot, Story sits behind a monitor, watching Julian McMahon as villainous Dr. Victor Von Doom zap a military commander with electric bolts. The effects will be computer-generated later, so for now, the actor gives a Bob Fosse-like hand gesture before letting out a dramatic exhale, displaying awe at his own powers. When the shot is over, a ripple of laughter emits from Story and the crew. McMahon deadpans: "Are you laughing because it's good?"
Story, still laughing, tells him no. McMahon theatrically raises his chin in indignation as he walks off set. A bigger laugh from the crew echoes off the far walls of the vast hangar.
Playing to a younger crowd
To find the right tone for "Silver Surfer," Story says he is tapping into why the first "Fantastic Four" was so successful. He had originally thought that movie was for comic-book crazed teenagers and 20-somethings.
"The film actually played younger than we thought. We found that 8-year-olds and 9-year-olds and even 6-year-olds were able to go watch this movie and have a ball," he says. "And because it's younger, we also found that we also got people on the other side of the 25 range because they have to take their kids."
That's how it played out even with some of his cast. Says Michael Chiklis, who plays Ben Grimm/The Thing and has two young daughters, "When we go to the movies, the kids win. And this was great because 'Fantastic Four' was a movie that I could bring my kids to but I wouldn't be sitting there in a coma going, 'Oh, my God, I can't wait for this to be over.' I could go for the ride and be a kid and enjoy it with them."
With that type of audience in mind, Story will again rely on the teasing banter among the superheroes that kids find so funny but will adjust his approach to McMahon's villain.
"Because of what happened with the last movie - the younger-audience skew - I've been asked to temper things just a little bit more toward a more childish audience," says McMahon, with what seems like a permanently arched eyebrow. "They wanted me to tone it down a little bit so it didn't look quite as brutal."
This might seem to be at cross-purposes with Story's desire to amp up Doom's villain quotient, but reached by phone two weeks before the movie's release, the director says, "It was a matter of we could have gone two ways with Doom. Either he comes back like a total monster, raging, or he's more of a scarred, articulate and plotting antagonist. We went with the latter. But, still, I wouldn't say he's less brutal."
Story also is pulling out some new ammunition: a bigger budget (about $30 million more than the original, which reportedly cost $100 million); grander scope (the movie goes from New York to Washington, D.C., to London to Shanghai and onto the North Pole); more action sequences; a cool gadget (in this case, the Fantasticar); and a gem in Marvel's coffers - the Silver Surfer himself.
"I don't think I could have gone where I did with this movie without the Silver Surfer," Story says. "The character brings us a lot of edge. And he's the conduit that bridges the generations because, at the end of the day, he's just cool."
Center of attention
The character, as originally scripted by Stan Lee and illustrated by Jack Kirby in 1966, is the herald of a planet-devouring creature called Galactus. Riding a surfboard, with awesome powers of destruction and an inclination to philosophize, the Silver Surfer has all the nasty qualities in an antagonist that Story required. Rendered by special-effects house Weta, the company that made Gollum for "The Lord of the Rings," the Silver Surfer is being positioned front and center in the poster campaign and trailer.
"He will be the star on this movie," says Ioan Gruffudd, who plays Reed Richards/Mr. Fantastic. "I think we have to relinquish that role right now." The comic title has always had something of a goofy reputation, thanks largely to the ribbing Johnny Storm/The Human Torch and Ben Grimm/The Thing subject each other to, and to Mr. Fantastic's oddball power to stretch his body.
No one ever said summer blockbusters were meant to be pillars of artistic integrity, but "Fantastic Four" had a whole summer's worth of schlock in its 106 minutes.
It was clearly a distant cousin of "X-Men," Fox and Marvel's wildly successful franchise, which has its comedic beats but is ultimately grounded in the grim reality of mutant life.
"The 'X-Men' movies are the nighttime movies and the 'The Fantastic Four' are daytime movies," says Ralph Winter, producer of the three "X-Men" films, as well as the "Fantastic Four" franchise. "The 'X-Men' characters look better at night, and there are darker themes. the characters are naturally more out in the public, more out in sunshine and daylight."
Some say they got too much sun. "I've met a handful of hard-core, diehard fans who are a little bit critical of it because it was so light-hearted," says Gruffudd, adding that the response has been "more positive than negative."
Story says he is doing his best to respond to the perceived needs of the audience, but he's not letting himself be pushed around. "I made myself more accessible," he says of listening to the criticism. "But not too accessible because you still got to do your thing." And he is not going to make excuses for the tone of the first movie.
"What's cool about the Fantastic Four comic books is that they were always fun," he says. "The studio and I always saw it the same way, that this was a humorous, more relatable, lighter version of the comic book movies that are out there."
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