Been thinking (I know – dangerous, right?) about something. I’ve been surfing around the movies sites I haunt on the internet and have seen the surge of trailers making a final push for next Friday. The surge is typical for any movie, so it’s nothing new. Push it hard the week it releases to catch the maybe five people who haven’t a clue the movies coming out. But the prattle on this one (Wolverine, BTW) has been scorching – mostly, I assume, directly related to the workprint popping up a few weeks back.
I wasn’t one that partook, I hate watching movies on my computer, mostly because my laptop is specifically for traveling so it’s a tiny one. Watching rentals on TV really pushes it because I’m one of the opinion that movies should be watched on a big screen. Wolverine being no exception. Let alone, that whole “responsible” part of me that talks damn loud.
I read through a thread on a popular movie review site the other day where someone had said that they’d watched the workprint and saw the final cut just recently. They didn’t say anything spoilerish, so I wasn’t worried about reading through. What caught my attention, however, was the overabundance of posters who kept saying that The Dark Knight was probably the best comic book movie ever made.
Please note, that’s their opinion, not mine. I loved TDK, for reasons that probably no one else did. They just kept going on and on about TDK and such. I really wanted to point out something, but I refrained. But since this is my blog, I shall not.
Sure, TDK was, as far as comic book movies go, exceedingly good. However, everyone seemed to be forgetting the fact that this was the seventh movie in the franchise. Yeah, that’s right seventh. (Batman the Movie (1966), Batman (1989), Batman Returns (1992), Batman Forever (1995), Batman & Robin (1997), Batman Begins (2005) & The Dark Knight (2008) – not to mention the spin-offs such as Catwoman (2004)). After seven movies, you’re bound to hit on one or two good ones to offset the misses.
They’ve relauched the franchise twice after the original movie in 1966 (with Adam West). Batman has been played by Adam West, Micheal Keaton (I still say WTF?), Val Kilmer, George Clooney and most recently, Christian Bale. So five different actors have played the character throughout the years.
X-Men Origins: Wolverine is on the fourth movie in the franchise, with who knows how many more (for the franchise overall)? They’ve been lucky enough to keep Hugh Jackman in the role for all four movies, something that the Batman franchise couldn’t even do with it’s lead.
So using TDK as the launching point for comparing X-Men Origins: Wolverine sees unbalanced and unfair. Like comparing apples to oranges (to steal a cliched analogy).
Yes, the movie studios should realize, after making then seeing the results of TDK with critcs and the general audience (and really, TDK had it’s flaws too), that adults deserve to have smart comic book movies that don’t talk to them as if they are a five years old clutching an action figure. But that’s not why movie studios make comic book movies. Movies are made to appeal to a general population of people, not a select group. Comic book fans/followers are that select group (and yes, I’m part of that select group). A movie studio is not going to waste millions of dollars to hit a small core group – that just doesn’t make good business sense. So you dilute the story, make changes that will appeal to the average soccer mom and her family.
Should it be this way? In my opinion, no. However, I know better. I’m not naive enough to think that a movie studio isn’t going to brand themselves by making a movie that will only appeal to the comic books fans. And in reality – they never could anyway. There’s absolutely no way to make a movie, about a character that you either love or hate, that is going to make everyone in the audience ecstatic.
It’s almost impossible to make everyone across the board happy, the movie studios aren’t going to change. So why expect them to? They are a business. You don’t like what they are cranking out?
Stop going to the movies.
Simple.

Those toys! Where does he get those wonderful toys?
- Joker, Batman 1989