ATOMIC REACTIONS: MARVEL COMICS ON FILM Now Available on Kindle!

The Kindleversion of ATOMIC REACTIONS: MARVEL COMICS ON FILM is now available for purchase at Amazon. I’m really pleased with how it’s turned out.

Here’s the KINDLE link and here’s the PAPERBACK link.

Taken from my reviews here, MARVEL COMICS ON FILM contains every single one of my Marvel reviews, and covers every single instance of Marvel Comics on film that I’m aware of.

Here’s the book’s Table of Contents:

Table of Contents

Fade from Black

Part One: The Marvel Cinematic Universe
1. Iron Man (2008)
2. The Incredible Hulk (2008)
3. Iron Man 2 (2010)
4. Thor (2011)
5. Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
6. Marvel’s The Avengers (2012)

The Avengers Reactions
1. The Hawkeye Reaction
2. The Agent Coulson Reaction
3. The Black Widow Reaction
4. The Nick Fury Reaction
5. The Maria Hill Reaction
6. The Captain America Reaction
7. The Chitauri/Thanos Reaction
8. The Hulk Reaction
9. The Thor Reaction
10. The Loki Reaction
11. The Iron Man Reaction

Marvel One-Shots
1. The Consultant, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Thor’s Hammer, and Item 47

Part Two: Spider-Man
The Sam Raimi Trilogy
1. Spider-Man (2002)
2. Spider-Man 2 (2004)
3. Spider-Man 3 (2007)

The Marc Webb Relaunch
4. The Amazing Spider-Man (2012)

Part Three: The X-Men
1. X-Men (2000)
2. X2: X-Men United (2003)
3. X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)
4. X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)
5. X-Men: First Class (2011)

Part Four: Blade
1. Blade (1998)
2. Blade II (2002)
3. Blade: Trinity (2004)

Part Five: The Punisher
1. The Punisher (1989)
2. The Punisher (2004)
3. Punisher: War Zone (2008)

Part Six: The Fantastic Four
1. Fantastic Four (1994)
2. Fantastic Four (2005)
3. Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)

Part Seven: Ghost Rider
1. Ghost Rider (2007)
2. Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance (2012)

Part Eight: Daredevil & Elektra
1. Daredevil (2003)
2. Elektra (2005)

Part Nine: The Non-MCU Avengers
1. Captain America (1944 serial)
2. Captain America (1990)
3. Hulk (2003)

Part Ten: The Nexus of All Realities
1. Howard the Duck (1986)
2. Man-Thing (2005)

Part Eleven: The TV Movies
1. Captain America (1979)
2. Captain America II: Death Too Soon (1979)
3. Dr. Strange (1978)
4. Generation X (1996)
5. The Incredible Hulk (1977 pilot)
6. The Incredible Hulk Returns (1988)
7. The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (1989)
8. The Death of the Incredible Hulk (1990)
9. Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. (1998)
10. Power Pack (1991)
11. Spider-Man (1977 pilot)

Part Twelve: The Marvel Animated Movies
1. The Invincible Iron Man (2007)
2. Doctor Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme (2007)
3. Hulk Vs. (2009)
4. Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow (2008)
5. Planet Hulk (2010)
6. Thor: Tales of Asgard (2011)
7. Ultimate Avengers (2006)
8. Ultimate Avengers 2 (2006)

FANTASTIC FOUR: RISE OF THE SILVER SURFER: An Invisible Kick in the Nuts

Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007) – Directed by Tim Story – Starring Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, Michael Chiklis, Julian McMahon, Andre Braugher, Kerry Washington, Doug Jones, Laurence Fishburne, Beau Garrett, Brian Posehn, and Stan Lee.

FANTASTIC FOUR: RISE OF THE SILVER SURFER is not the worst superhero movie ever made, but it may very well be the dumbest.

The sinkhole that drags this film down is the Invisible Woman, but it would be terribly unfair to lay the blame solely at the feet of Jessica Alba. Don’t misunderstand me, she’s absolutely horrific in much of this film, but neither the script nor the director have put Alba in a position to succeed. RISE’s conception of Invisible Woman is of a nervous, bitchy, whiny, indecisive, overly emotional little girl playing grown up, and they cake so much make-up onto her face and hair that she ends up looking less realistic than the Thing.

The Invisible Woman is a completely tedious and dreadful character that’s largely defined by negative qualities. Her and Reed are on attempt #4 to get married. The idea that these two keep trying to get married and keep having things come up to stop the vows from being taken is a good one, but instead of the film treating it with a knowing wink acknowledging the history of wedding interruptions in comic book history, it’s made Sue twitchy, uptight, and questioning not only her marriage to Reed but their entire existence as superheroes.

How long have you been kicking around the Anxiety, hearing me talk about superhero movies? Because if it’s more than a week you know what’s coming:

I HAVE LITTLE INTEREST IN SUPERHERO STORIES ABOUT SUPERHEROES WHO DO NOT WANT TO BE SUPERHEROES.

Honestly, if that’s the story you want to tell, then why tell it? It’s one thing if someone like Ben Grimm (Michael Chiklis) temporarily wants out because his superpower has hugely negative consequences, but even then I get tired of it real quick. Do you know what superhero never existed? Mister Mopey Pants. Or Sister Mopey Pants. Do you know why?

Because who the f*ck wants to read about a superhero who’s depressed every month? (Wait. Wasn’t that Spawn during his “sit in the alley” years? Maybe there is a reason these stupid stories keep getting told and that reason is that I’m out of touch.) RISE even includes the freaking SILVER SURFER, who’s not exactly know for bringing the happy fun time with him. Honestly, what were the creative people thinking? We’ve got a somber cosmic visitor so let’s make one of our main characters be all “I don’t think I want to do this anymore.” It’s nonsense, even if we didn’t go through this plot with Ben, Reed, and Sue the first time around.

Apparently, Sue wanting to get married manifests a new superpower that makes everyone else stupid. This power has a particular effect on director Tim Story’s narrative, which tells us right up front that this is attempt #4, but then has everyone act like this is attempt #1. Johnny (Chris Evans) tries to get Reed to agree to a bachelor party (said party consisting of Reed, Johnny, and Ben), and right before the wedding, Sue is pouting to Alicia Masters (Kerry Washington) about this marriage not feeling right and how they’ll never be normal. Sue is a bit uncomfortable about their celebrity status, yet still decides to hold their wedding in the middle of freaking New York City. Reed agrees to go out with Johnny and Ben, and of course Johnny sets Reed up with two hotties who are all over him.

Reed has made such a big deal about how he would only agree to a bachelor party as long as there were no “exotic dancers” that I’m pretty sure these women are escorts.

They’re all over him, he eventually loosens up and has some fun, and then Sue shows up with General Hager (Andre Braugher) to look all angry at Reed for having fun. I mean, it’s a bachelor party. What did she expect? She revels in telling Reed later on that she’s not actually mad at him because her bachelorette party was super crazy, but we don’t get to see that.

Probably because Sue’s only friend is Alicia and-

Right. That brings this up – who the hell are all these people at their wedding? They’re just nameless people from Wedding Central Casting. Why does Sue need to have this big, fancy public wedding if no one there acts like they even know these people. It’s particularly funny at the end of the movie when Reed and Sue try to get married again. Attempt #5 comes in Japan and, I swear, their wedding is full of guests from Wedding Central Casting in Japanese costumes. Who are these people? Did Ben and Johnny walk around Japan and collect random people?

Or are these more of Johnny’s escorts paid to act like a wedding party?

What adds to the general dreariness of the film is that Johnny has a run-in with the Silver Surfer and as a result, his powers are on the fritz. Basically, if you touch Johnny, your powers and his exchange bodies. Why? This subplot actually takes the most enjoyable character and wraps him in a wet blanket for much of the film. It’s tedious to watch and the payoff of having Johnny go all Super Skrull at the end of the movie when he combines all of the FF’s powers into his body isn’t worth it, as cool as it is to look at. (And why everyone touching at once sends all their powers into Johnny is … yes, something better not thought about.)

RISE is a very simple film that almost seems designed for children. Characters have little complexity and everything happens because the story needs it to happen, not because it makes any kind of sense.

The relationship between Ben and Johnny is still the best part of this franchise, and Chiklis and Evans do everything that’s asked of them. As bad as RISE is, they are enjoyable to watch – at least until Johnny gets all emotional with Frankie Raye (Beau Garrett) about her needing to trust them or else the world is going to get destroyed.

I mean, honestly, you’re the freaking Fantastic Four and there’s an army officer holding a gun on you and YOU STOP IN YOUR TRACKS TO ASK PERMISSION EVEN THOUGH THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END?

Speaking of being destroyed – when RISE was released, people lost their bananas over the fact that Galactus is a big storm cloud instead of, you know, Galactus. I’m sure I complained about it, too, but now … it’s really not a big deal. (It’s amazing how the greatness of the whole Avengers cinematic franchise has mellowed many of us.) In fact, I think it’s a pretty cool visual idea and when this big cosmic cloud is about to consume the Earth, it feels like a major threat.

There’s a good movie in here somewhere, but I have never wanted Jessica Alba on-screen less than I do in RISE. Ioan Gruffudd isn’t much better as Reed, and there’s nothing Andre Braugher can do with the simplistic General Hager. RISE is the kind of movie where the end of the world is coming and people like Hager and Reed are still fighting battles begun in high school.

Doug Jones and Laurence Fishburne team up to give the Surfer more decency and intelligence than anyone else around them, although the whole idea that Surfer is willing to save the Earth because Sue reminds him of someone … ugh.

Is RISE better than Story’s first FF film?

Sure.

Maybe.

I don’t care.

I’m glad we never got a third FF film if it was going to be of this quality. I’d rather have seen a MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE movie with Ben and Johnny on a road trip. Given what Chiklis and Evans have brought to these past two films, that would have been a fun movie to watch.

FANTASTIC FOUR (2005): A Few Days in Space. What’s the Worst That Could Happen?

Fantastic Four (2005) – Directed by Tim Story – Starring Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, Michael Chiklis, Julian McMahon, Kerry Washington, Maria Menounos, and Stan Lee.

FANTASTIC FOUR is an incredibly odd duck.

Parts of the Tim Story-directed feature are incredibly good, yet other parts are incredibly awful, and the result is a film that I’m never entirely sure what to do with – sometimes, I can shut my brain off and enjoy it well enough and other times, I can’t stand the sight of it. There’s two primary areas of conflict that FANTASTIC FOUR creates for me: in the film’s story and in its acting. In both instances, the film offers heaping helpings of both, which ultimately ends up leaving me conflicted more than either appreciative or appalled with what’s here, though there’s a slight lean towards the latter.

If you’ve been around the Anxiety for a bit, you know how I feel about cinematic adaptations: I own the source material and I have an imagination, so I don’t need the current movie version of a book or a character to be an exact match of the comic, the book, the play, the cartoon, the movie, etc. What I want most out of a movie is to be entertained by the movie. If I am, great. If not … then a movie opens itself up to criticism about why what’s on the screen isn’t as good as what’s in the source material.

And that’s an area where FANTASTIC FOUR falls a bit short – what’s on the screen isn’t superior to what’s best about the source material. The FF are at their most enjoyable when they’re a fun, adventuresome family, but Story and his production staff have largely gutted that conception from these characters, replacing that core attribute with a group of people who are not all that much fun, certainly not adventuresome, and barely a family.

Instead, Story has created a group of awkward, bickering children walking around in adult bodies. It’s not an entirely ineffective idea, and as long as Ben Grimm (Michael Chiklis) is around to play the grown-up, there’s some value in it.

The movie opens with a broke Reed Richards (Ioan Gruffudd) going to the uber-successful Victor von Doom (Julian McMahaon) to ask for money to fund his next project, researching a cosmic storm that he believes is the origin of life on Earth. Victor enjoys making Reed sweat, of course, and he wins on every level by agreeing to make this project happen: he gets 75% of any profits generated and he gets to show off his closeness with Reed’s ex-girlfriend, Susan Storm (Jessica Alba).

The group goes to space, something goes freak-of-nature with the cosmic storm cloud, and the group lands back on Earth, where they slowly discover their powers.

That’s where the story goes to turd.

It’s understandable, of course, that Ben Grimm would not be happy with being turned into a big piece of walking orange rock, and there’s a nice balance with Johnny Storm (Chris Evans) being absolutely thrilled with his powers. It’s the reactions to their powers from the middle three characters – Reed, Sue, and Victor – that sink this narrative.

After his powers manifest, Ben breaks out of Victor’s place (where they’ve been staying post-accident) and walks back to his fiance’s place, where she rejects him because he’s a monster. So much for love. Ben goes for a walk and ends up sitting on a bridge, where he encounters a man who’s going to jump off the bridge in a suicide leap. When this dude sees the Thing, he freaks and heads back into traffic. Ben steps in to save him, taking the full brunt of force from an oncoming rig, which causes a ridiculously huge accident, with car after car after car crashing and piling up. It’s the kind of accident that only happens in movies, which is okay, but the crowd that gathers on the walking bridge to watch everything unfold isn’t.

Why? Well, Story apparently feels that every freaking action scene in this movie (except for the one that happens in space) needs to happen in front of a crowd of New York City onlookers. It’s kind of maddening, to be honest, and makes me wonder if he wasn’t taking money on the sly from an extras casting agency. is the constant use of crowds supposed to make FANTASTIC FOUR some kind of metaphor for our celebrity-driven culture? If so, it’s incredibly clumsily handled, as there’s no investigation or examination or rumination of celebrity here – it’s just that when the FF goes outside, a crowd gathers to watch.

Reed, Sue, and Johnny show up on the bridge to help out. Everyone is freaking out over the Thing, thinking he’s the cause of all the bad stuff that’s happening, but by the end of the FF saving everyone, people love them. Well, everyone except Ben’s fiance, who shows up on the scene to put her engagement ring on the ground. It’s a stupid scene. Even if you reveal yourself to be so shallow that you don’t want to marry the person you love because they develop a problematic skin disorder, calling off that engagement by putting your ring on the ground in front of a crowd of people is pretty classless. Maybe Ben just has poor taste in women, or maybe stupid things happen in this movie just because the story is clumsily put together. The way the scene plays in the movie, it happens just because Story and Co. thought seeing Ben struggling to pick that ring up off the ground with his big rock hands would engender sympathy for him on our part.

The press is super interested in all of this arm-stretching, invisible-turning, fire-starting group activity, but three out of the four of them don’t want any press, so while Reed and Sue act like the very idea of them talking to the press is tantamount to selling their newborn to US Weekly for a dollar. Johnny, of course, goes off and yaps away to the gathered press, infuriating the rest of them, and resulting in Reed telling everyone they’re grounded at his lab until he can figure out a way to reverse the process.

Ugh. I hate, hate, hate movies about people with amazing powers who don’t want those powers. Why do people keep making these stories? I’m not plunking down money to watch people with awesome powers be total tools about it. It’s the equivalent of hearing someone complain about their parents buying them the wrong kind of car. Your parents bought you a car! You’re really going to whine about how they bought you a BMW instead of a Merc? Or because they bought you a silver Fusion instead of a black Fusion?

We get this protracted middle section with the FF couped up at Reed’s place. Johnny constantly complains about being trapped and I’m totally on his side. Reed is trying to get his machine working for Ben, but I don’t want to watch all of this mopiness and constrained behavior. This is the FF! I want to see them out adventuring. If this whole middle section was working, then fine, but it doesn’t work, and Johnny’s antics and agitation clearly demonstrate that it doesn’t.

Victor’s not much help, either. He’s been altered by the cosmic storm, too, and his flesh is slowly peeling away to reveal metal skin beneath. I just do not understand what they’ve done to Doom in this movie, turning him into this ego-maniacal, narcissistic tool with organic metal skin and the ability to fire lightning out of his hands. How is this cool? When Victor finally dons his metal mask (which he gets by stealing it from a storefront window, an act that is probably the single-dumbest thing in this entire movie) and puts on his green cloak, it looks like the kind of costume you’d see on a mediocre cosplayer. And when Victor tells Reed, “Call me Doom,” it’s laughably bad, not fear-inducing. Here we have one of the absolute greatest villains of all-time and Story has reduced him to being a complete tool.

Reed and Sue fair no better than Victor, unfortunately. Sue has been working at Von Doom Industries as Victor’s head of Genetics Research, which plays about a 1% role in the film. I’ve said it before and I’ll keep saying it – Jessica Alba seems like a perfectly nice person but her acting range is severely limited. She had to be cast here because Fox wanted a name star somewhere in the mix, and that’s fine, but if you cast a star who can’t convincingly play the role you hire them to play, either find someone else or tailor the role to meet their strengths.

Sue is a mess of a character. She’s like this spoiled little girl throughout most of the movie, upset with Reed’s communication skills the way a 16-year old girl is upset with her older boyfriend for wanting to hang out with the guys instead of staying in with her. When she’s not pouting, she’s playing the mother hen, and Alba has no more ability to make that aspect believable.

Reed is perhaps the single worst superhero in any of these modern movies. He’s just incredibly boring to watch, and the character seems pieced together by random attributes rather than by a solid idea of who they wanted Reed Richards to be. There’s never a sense that he’s all that smart, either, as all of his experiments seem to fail. He sucks the life out of this movie, and when Gruffudd and Alba are on the screen together, it’s incredibly painful to watch.

Luckily, we’ve got Chris Evans and Michael Chiklis around to keep things moving. Evans is perfect as Johnny Storm, cracking wise, pulling pranks on Ben, and hitting on every female in his path. Chiklis is great at being the grounded center of the movie. The lovable animosity between them is the best part of the film, and I would have preferred to see a movie built around Evans and Chiklis instead of around Reed and Sue.

The final battle takes place in the middle of a parted crowd and the FF win. Hooray. It’s a bit of a letdown of an ending (four heroes vs. one bad guy!), just like FANTASTIC FOUR is a bit of a letdown as a movie.