T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1065.1 | | BSS::DEVEREAUX | | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:06 | 19 |
| >> I personally have never heard of Spawn, so I can't imagine what that
>> would be about.
I have heard of SPAWN and even have a comic shoot-off from this
comic (Angela). Still, I can't imagine a movie made off this (SPAWN)
one.
BTW, they are making a CROW 2, FYI
>> I think that there is a lot of risks in doing a comic to big screen
>> movie....how many people know the characters....what if it turns out to be
>> another Judge Dredd (which flopped)...can they capture the audience they
>> need....can they provide the special effects?
There's even a bigger risk of doing coinop games on the big screen, but
it's been done, quite successfully, I believe.
Anyway, movie makers are probably running out of ideas. Look how many
remakes of "old" movies are still coming out.
|
1065.2 | My spidey senses are tingling! | POLAR::TYSICK | If ya wanna come in 2nd; follow me! | Thu Apr 18 1996 14:51 | 12 |
| RE: -1 & -2
Spawn from my understanding is an Ex-C.I.A. agent who dies and
sells his soul to the devil. The deal is; he has to hunt down criminals
such as rapists, child molesters and murders...he then trades their
souls into the devil. All he has to do is keep producing souls!
I think Spidey would be kinda cool on the big screen, as long as
it's done properly! The web shootin' & swingin' could be difficult...
but that's a job for a DEC computer to take care of.
J
|
1065.3 | | CHEFS::HANDLEY_I | DJ's do it with 12 inches | Fri Apr 19 1996 06:12 | 13 |
|
There's a British comic called "Button Man" which I think would make an
excellent movie. It's about an ex-mercenary who gets suckered into a
game run by the wealthy heads of society which pits each player's
asassin, or "button man" against each other. The button mans who comes
out alive then wins his "fixer" the bet. The button men and "voices"
never meet but when the main character is set up to be killed, he goes
after his voice with revenge in mind. This would make an excellent
thriller. Anyone else think of comics that would translate well to the
big screen?
I.
|
1065.4 | You should hear my yell when I'm alone... | BRAT::MONBLEAU | | Fri Apr 19 1996 13:27 | 11 |
| I may be showing my age here, but as a boy a long time ago, my favorite
comic hero, and thus, movie hero was Tarzan. I've followed them all -
from Elmo Lincoln through Ron Ely. "Tarzan The Ape Man" was the
industry break through of it's era, but as a Tarzan enthusiast, I
longed for the day when a producer would work with one of ERB's goo
Tarzan books and feature places such as the lost lands of Paul-ul-Don,
Opar, or Peluseda, or show a battle between the Terribs and Queen
Lara's tropps in the croc boats. ERB's Tarzan was at the forefornt then
of fantasy/fiction and there is still tonbs and tons opf material that
the movies have never touched. Plenty of room for outrageous special
effects.
|
1065.5 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Audiophiles do it 'til it hertz! | Fri Apr 19 1996 13:39 | 6 |
|
So I guess you weren't a really big fan of "Tarzan: The Legend
of Greystoke", were you?
8^)
|
1065.6 | Oodles of former comics on the big screen ... | ZPOVC::GEOFFREY | | Tue Apr 23 1996 05:07 | 13 |
| This isn't a new trend!! How soon we forget Ninja Turtles, Addams
Family, Dennis the Menace, Richie Rich, Darkman, uh, lessee, and
Tales from the Crypt, Dick Tracy, Tank Girl, uh, uh, well ...
At any rate, I read somewhere that there are at least forty recent
movies that were originally comics and/or cartoons. Statistically,
most of them are bombs, or at least marginal, like Dick Tracy. But
the ones that pay off big like Batman are the ones that everyone
remembers, even the studio heads. These days they are terrified of
trying anything new on a big budget, so they recycle whatever they
can find that once earned some audience acceptance, somewhere.
Geoff
|
1065.7 | Greystoke was an OK guy | BRAT::MONBLEAU | | Mon Apr 29 1996 14:15 | 22 |
| .5 Tarzan, Legend of Greystoke
Actually, I did enjoy that film. It wasn't the fantasy trip that could
be possible, but it was a serious attempt to deal with the original
premise that put Tarzan in the jungle in the first place. It was
actualy quite well done I thought, and made a great deal more sense
than what the movies in the 40s & 50s did -
The one that really irritated me was Tarzan played by Jock Mahoney
(Range Rider) parachuting into India to help out with some foolish plot.
The Ron Ely ones I really hated - any fool could recognize Indian
elephants (easier to train) shot "on location" in central America,
using locals pretending to be African Tribesmen. Had to set Tarzan back
50 years.
Anyway. Legend of Greystoke was a decent attempt to get a message out,
(civilized man might not be as civilized as the noble wild man, and a
few environmental messages as well.)
I am open minded - I just want reasonable treatment of the material.
Thanks for asking - I had forgotton that movie.
|
1065.8 | | ODIXIE::LOWER | | Thu May 09 1996 03:20 | 1 |
| Don't forget Howard the Duck...
|
1065.9 | Jenny should have been more like Betty... | SWAM1::STERN_TO | Tom Stern -- Have TK, will travel! | Mon May 13 1996 15:29 | 1 |
| The Rocketeer...
|
1065.10 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Being weird isn't enough | Mon May 13 1996 15:36 | 3 |
|
Oh, but Jenny is such a doll.
|
1065.11 | ...I know I have... | SWAM1::STERN_TO | Tom Stern -- Have TK, will travel! | Mon May 13 1996 16:57 | 2 |
| And just think what it would have been like if they had hired Connely
to play Betty instead of Jenny
|
1065.12 | | CHEFS::HANDLEY_I | Zuul! | Tue May 14 1996 06:11 | 5 |
|
That movie only has two things going for it, and Jennifer Connelly
posesses both of them.
;^)
|
1065.13 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Cracker | Tue May 14 1996 10:43 | 6 |
|
Humor and charm, I'd bet. But I wouldn't bet too much money
on that.
8^)
|
1065.14 | I LIKED IT! | VYGER::GIBSONJ | Sundays papers on a Saturday? | Tue May 14 1996 15:29 | 5 |
| I actually enjoyed The Rocketeer.
And Jenny!
Steve
|