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Terry Hooper-Scharf
Thursday, 13 August 2015
The Naming and Blaming (Still) Continues
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
The actors told us all in interview after interview how "great" it was. Now this. My heart is 'broken'.
Yeah.
The question of how fast rats can desert a sinking ship is answered at last!
Days
before Fantastic Four opened, director Josh Trank sent an email to some
members of the cast and crew to say he was proud of the film, which, he
wrote, was “better than 99 percent of the comic-book movies ever made.”
“I don’t think so,” responded one cast member.
Maybe
if Trank had left it at that, Hollywood insiders and fan websites could
have played their own parlor games as to who was at fault for the
film’s colossal failure and Fantastic Four would have faded into the
history books as did John Carter and other bombs before it. (The $122
million-budgeted film opened to just $25.7 million in the U.S. and $34
million abroad, far below even the most cautious predictions.)
But Trank, 31, could not resist tweeting on Aug. 6, as the movie was
hitting theaters, that he had made “a fantastic version” of the film
that audiences would “probably never see.” Though Trank quickly deleted
the tweet, his public disavowal of the film at such a key moment enraged
20th Century Fox executives and stirred a pot that had begun to bubble
when the director was dropped by Lucasfilm from a Star Wars standalone
film at the end of April, prompting THR to report
that one of the causes was his erratic behavior on Fantastic Four. Now,
insiders on the film say the situation was worse than previously
revealed, and Trank has enlisted pit-bull lawyer Marty Singer to
advocate on his behalf. And so the game of blame has gotten underway.
Fantastic
Four is not the only big studio film to go flying off the rails,
ostensibly because a director is in over his head. Sometimes a studio
can salvage the project, as Paramount did when it shut down World War Z
amid crew complaints about director Marc Forster and commissioned a
rewrite of the third act. The film went on to gross $540 million
worldwide.
Universal intervened to save the original The Bourne Identity when
director Doug Liman seemed unable to pull that film together. It
launched a franchise but producer Frank Marshall — brought in to rescue
the movie — said later that he had taken unprecedented measures to get
the movie done. “I’ve always had a respect for the line between a
producer and a director,” Marshall told me in 2005. “And I had to step
over that line into something that I feel is the director’s
responsibility.”
Liman moved on to his next project, Mr. &
Mrs. Smith with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, only to run into similar
problems. Akiva Goldsman, who wrote and was a producer on that film,
called him “a madman,” and Liman filed a grievance with the Directors
Guild saying his prerogatives as director had been compromised. But the
film grossed $478 million worldwide, and Liman’s reputation suffered no
serious damage.
Above: Josh Trank
In
Trank’s case, multiple sources associated with the project say the
director did not produce material that would have opened the way to a
salvageable film. And by several accounts, he resisted help. “He holed
up in a tent and cut himself off from everybody,” says one high-level
source. And literally there was a tent on the Louisiana set. A crew
member says: “He built a black tent around his monitor. He was extremely
withdrawn.” Between set-ups, this person adds, “he would go to his
trailer and he wouldn’t interact with anybody.”
Sources say Fox
believed in what one executive calls a “grounded, gritty version of
Fantastic Four that was almost the opposite of previous versions” — and
initially thought Trank could deliver that. Several sources say Fox
stood by Trank as he pushed a gloomy tone on young stars Miles Teller,
Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara and Jamie Bell. “During takes, he would be
telling [cast members] when to blink and when to breathe,” one person
says. “He kept pushing them to make the performance as flat as
possible.”
There were worrying personal issues as well. As THR
reported in May, Trank and his dogs allegedly caused more than $100,000
worth of damage to a rented house in Baton Rouge that he and his wife
occupied while the film was shooting there. Sources say now that after
landlord Martin Padial moved to evict Trank, photographs of the
landlord’s family that were in the house were defaced. Padial made a
complaint to the local sheriff’s department and filed a civil suit in
Louisiana that is sealed. Padial’s attorney, Michael Bienvenu, declined
to comment on the matter. The sheriff’s department says the case was
“closed as a civil matter between landlord and tenant.”
Neither Trank nor Singer would comment.
A crew member acknowledges that Trank bears much of the fault for the
film’s problems but also says the Fox studio should not escape blame.
The movie was “ill-conceived, made for the wrong reasons and there was
no vision behind the property,” this person says. “Say what you will
about Marvel but they have a vision.”
As Fox hurried to put the
project into production before rights to the material reverted to
Marvel, the studio was scrambling with multiple rewrites and delays in
starting the film. They “were afraid of losing the rights so they
pressed forward and didn’t surround [Trank] with help or fire him. They
buried their heads in the sand.” Fox declined to comment.
Another
source says the notion of firing Trank came up even before the cameras
started to roll. But Fox put its faith in him because he had directed
the studio’s 2012 found-footage hero movie Chronicle, which grossed $127
million worldwide on a $12 million budget. Based on that, insiders say
Fox executives thought they had found an “in-house director,” a young
talent who could become another J.J. Abrams. And the studio was trying
to shake off its reputation for micro-managing filmmakers. So executives
were reluctant to interfere on Fantastic Four despite warnings of
trouble.
When
the seriousness of the problems could no longer be ignored, says a key
source on the project, it was too late to fire the director. “How do you
ask someone to take over half of a movie shot by someone else?” he
says. “You either hire somebody desperate for work or you [start over],
write off pretty much the whole budget and lose the cast.”
As
filming wound toward an unhappy close, the studio and producers Simon
Kinberg and Hutch Parker engaged in a last-minute scramble to come up
with an ending. With some of the cast not fully available at that point
and Kinberg juggling X-Men: Apocalypse and Star Wars, a lot of material
was shot with doubles and the production moved to Los Angeles to film
scenes with Teller against a green screen. “It was chaos,” says a crew
member, adding that Trank was still in attendance “but was neutralized
by a committee.” Another source says instead the studio pulled together
“a dream team,” including writer and World War Z veteran Drew Goddard,
to rescue the movie. Whether the final version of the film is better or
worse than what Trank put together is a matter of opinion, of course,
but the consensus, clearly, is that neither was good.
One central
player on the film says the process of making big films often is messy
but in many cases, the studio can fight its way out of difficulties. A
Fantastic Four crew member concurs but says that doesn’t relieve the
studio of its responsibility for what went wrong with this film. “To me,
it is a classic indictment of the entire system,” he says. “Give Josh
Trank a $20 million movie. Groom him. But they don’t make those movies
any more… Nobody should escape scrutiny on this one. Everyone should
take a good look in the mirror, myself included. Even I probably did the
movie for the wrong reasons.”
Yeah, I seriously think that after Byrne left everyone just shrugged and had no idea what to do. Over the last few years (up until that Death of Johnny Storm issue which killed it 100% for me -he came back, could be killed but not killed and...no) there were glimpses of old style stories but Reed Richards became an evilish, dark bastard with secrets (including that the FFs powers were killing them -what happened there??) rather like Tony Stark who lack of ideas scribblers in Avengers volume 1 turned into a murderer with a secret plan...uh, a bit like the plot to "We've Run Out Of Ideas" or Time Runs Out" -I just saw the last two issues. Awful. ALL just leading up to Secret Wars...and nothing else apparently. THIS was the BIG plan of their "master writer"???? oy.
Yeah. And it's interesting that even comicbookgirl19 in her video refers to Fantasticar and other things that made the book great as "corny". We are talking (in the comics) of four people who went into space and got super powers. I hated the Doom aspect in the last two movies though other than that I liked them -"colourful" and "corny" CBG19 says -yeah: comics!
Reading this and laughing. Do still miss the classic Fantastic Family.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I seriously think that after Byrne left everyone just shrugged and had no idea what to do. Over the last few years (up until that Death of Johnny Storm issue which killed it 100% for me -he came back, could be killed but not killed and...no) there were glimpses of old style stories but Reed Richards became an evilish, dark bastard with secrets (including that the FFs powers were killing them -what happened there??) rather like Tony Stark who lack of ideas scribblers in Avengers volume 1 turned into a murderer with a secret plan...uh, a bit like the plot to "We've Run Out Of Ideas" or Time Runs Out" -I just saw the last two issues. Awful. ALL just leading up to Secret Wars...and nothing else apparently. THIS was the BIG plan of their "master writer"???? oy.
ReplyDeleteThe bright, warm cast of characters ripped to pieces. The feeling that family is a bad word. I really do prefer a lot of the older stuff.
ReplyDeleteYeah. And it's interesting that even comicbookgirl19 in her video refers to Fantasticar and other things that made the book great as "corny". We are talking (in the comics) of four people who went into space and got super powers. I hated the Doom aspect in the last two movies though other than that I liked them -"colourful" and "corny" CBG19 says -yeah: comics!
ReplyDelete