Realism and the Marvel Movies: Are they about to fall apart?

Scalzi’s summer movie wrap-up over at FilmCritic.com got me thinking about the Marvel Studios superhero movie franchises.

Marvel Studios became relevant when they released Blade in 1998.  When they released X-Men and Spider-man in the early 2000s, they proved that big-budget movies based on superhero comic books could be profitable.  They’ve been doing well ever since.  More after the jump.

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John Scalzi’s got a good post up about what makes a science fiction film (or really any genre film) a “classic”: http://www.filmcritic.com/features/2011/08/what-makes-a-scifi-film-a-classic/.

Burke and Hare

Starring Simon Pegg and Andy Serkis, Burke and Hare is a dark comedy about the infamous grave-robbing duo who provided Edinburgh’s medical students with fresh cadavers during the early 19th Century, often by “helping along” their ailing victims.

It isn’t officially released in the US until September 9, 2011, but it’s available on Comcast On Demand now.  My wife and I found it by accident; I hadn’t even heard of it.  Simon Pegg fans will recognize some regulars from his Spaced days and the Edgar Wright films, and a number of other stellar actors round out an impressive cast.

The acting’s great, the comedic timing’s exquisite, and it manages to be silly in a good way, slapstick without being ridiculous.  An unexpected pleasure on a Tuesday night.

Andy Serkis turns out to be a damn fine actor, even without the mo-cap suit.

Incidentally, interest in Burke and Hare (the historic figures) seems to be peaking at the moment: author Brian Ruckley’s recently released gothic thriller The Edinburgh Dead is set in exactly the same time and place, featuring some of the same plot elements.

“I’m going to hazard a guess his next book will involve blood, swearing, hard men and women living by their swords and absolutely no hard info on if Logen is alive or not.”

Adam Whitehead, from the Wertzone, commenting on Joe Abercrombie’s forthcoming novel set in his First Law universe.  This made me laugh out loud.

‘Dark Knight Rises’ Backlash

Apparently there’s been some backlash on the internets concerning the leaked footage and photographs from the set of The Dark Knight Rises.  

People, please.  This is such stupid fanboy bullshit.  Films take time to make.  You absolutely cannot judge anything about a movie based on a couple of minutes of leaked footage taken on what was probably a camera phone and a few set photos.  Keep in mind that filmmakers do multiple takes of every shot to get it right.  We could easily be seeing the worst of them.  The fight scene I posted below had obviously just been blocked out before the actual take, which makes it look like maybe this was an early take and not the final one.

Also keep in mind that you’re not seeing any of this from the point of view of the actual movie camera, or in anywhere near the frame rate or resolution that camera will provide.  On top of which, there will be massive post-production work done on probably every shot, including color correction, CGI, etc.  Judging this film on this shit is like judging a Caravaggio based on some initial sketches made on a cocktail napkin.  The fact that you read about movies on the web and then post poorly-written, typo-filled screeds about them in the comments section does not make you qualified to comment on the potential quality of a film from a few shots of its production.

I Don’t Like Photos on Fantasy Book Covers

Well, I don’t.  Consider the trade paperback releases of Joe Abercrombie’s two latest novels, Best Served Cold and The Heroes.

These almost work for me, because they obviously spent time and effort composing the photographs: they chose the right models, selected high quality props and costumes, and most importantly shot them in an interesting, artistic way.  They also used a typeface that is large enough, gritty enough, and bold enough to make the cover feel edgy instead of just tacky.  The typeface takes up such a substantial portion of the cover that it makes the cover as a whole feel more designer and less B-movie.  They’re certainly a step above the tried and true approach of your typical urban fantasy or low-budget epic fantasy, where they dress up a hot girl in a bunch of leather, give her a cheap, decorative sword to hold, and then fiddle with it in Photoshop so it has a red haze or a bunch of creepy shadows obscuring the obvious crappiness of the work (or unimaginative composition and dumb churning water, like the Sam Sykes cover to the right).  Aidan over at A Dribble of Ink seems to have similar thoughts (and a commenter noted that they look like movie posters, which they do).  If you’re going to do a composed, cosplay, photoshopped cover, this is the way to do it.

Note that I said they almost work for me.  Because ultimately, this is romance novel stuff of the worst kind.  All of it.  I used to think I understood the reasoning behind it.  I used to think it had to do with cost: it seemed reasonable that hiring a professional artist to produce an original piece of artwork (a painting, for example) was more expensive than photoshopping a picture of a girl in a leather corset.  I’m certain that’s still true.  But the practice of using composed photography is common enough now that, at least in some cases, it’s clearly on purpose, rather than by necessity.

Joe Abercrombie’s a good example.  This guy isn’t successful enough yet to warrant spending money for an actual painting?  I find that hard to believe.  What seems more likely is that is that, in their infinite wisdom, his publishers decided that his work was more chick-in-leather than Michael-Whelan-painting.  This is a fairly recent development, too, because the original releases of his First Law trilogy featured some creatively low-budget graphic design.  The more recent editions of his books have cover art that speaks more to the Laurell K. Hamilton set than to epic fantasy fans, however.

Which is not to say that all original art is good original art: some artists in particular leave a lot to be desired, and most of the fantasy art out there is old-fashioned and undeniably cliche.  But for my money, you can do infinitely more with typeface, color, and a good graphic designer than you can with a camera if budget is your concern.  I realize that I’m probably in the minority here; presumably there’s marketing research behind this particular publishing industry aesthetic; presumably they’re pushing this crap because it sells books.  That doesn’t mean I have to like it.

Not everyone can have Lev Grossman’s covers, after all (particularly the UK versions — you’ll have to Google them though, because I’m too lazy to post any more images here).

Let this be a notice to speculative fiction publishers, however: every time you put a model in a bunch of cheap catalog costume gear and snap a photo of them rather than come up with an actual design for a cover, you will drive me (and those like me) away.  Because I have an actual aversion to it.  Revulsion, in fact.  Real faces looking out at me from a fantasy book cover (I don’t even like movie tie-in covers, in fact, though I concede their relevance and effectiveness) makes me feel like I’m reaching for the kind of book that middle-aged administrative assistants put in cute cloth book covers to read on the train.  Not something mysterious, edgy, dark, or interesting.  Certainly not something terribly intelligent.  Which is a disservice to both the writer and the reader, ultimately, marketing be damned.

“I knew [The Magician King] was a quest story, something like a hero’s journey, but I knew I didn’t want to tell it the way it’s usually told. I wanted to make it feel somehow more like the way our lives — real lives, modern lives — feel. In your classic quest story, if you’re brave enough and pure of heart enough and clever enough and kill enough monsters, you generally end up with what you were looking for. In my experience, anyway, life isn’t like that at all. Often you don’t understand what you’re looking for till long after you’ve found it, and being brave and good and handy with a sword aren’t always enough in the end to guarantee a good outcome. Sometimes they have nothing to do with the outcome.”

Lev Grossman, author of The Magicians and the just-released sequel, The Magician King, wrote a wonderful account of his process during the writing of the latter book.  His methods are comfortingly human.

Momentarily confused Neil Blomkamp and Christian Alvart (not sure why) when I read a tweet about Blomkamp’s movie Elysium, which is in production and stars Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, and others.  I thought for a split second I was looking at news about a sequel to Alvart’s Pandorum being greenlit.  Pandorum was intended to be part of a trilogy, but it received mostly negative reviews when it came out.  I thought it kicked absolute ass.  I think I was confused because the ship in Pandorum is named the Elysium….

I’ve been playing Half-Life 2 again.  I just finished Half-Life 2 itself, and have moved on to Episode 1.  Partly it’s because we just finished a new room in our house which has improved my console gaming environment dramatically, but mostly it’s because I go back to this game periodically.  In fact, the single regret I had when finally making the switch from PC to Mac a few years ago was that I might not be able to play the Half-Life 2: Episode 3 right away.  Happily, Valve ported all of their games to XBox with The Orange Box, and hopefully they’ll do the same with the next Half-Life.

If I had to make a list of the top ten science fiction universes, Half-Life would be in it.  If Hollywood could make a film with half the balance, creativity, and atmosphere of Half-Life 2, people wouldn’t feel so bad about spending 12 bucks to see it.  But I think ultimately the Half-Life series draws its strength from its medium, one which Valve Software has mastered.

Fight Footage from ‘The Dark Knight Rises’

There seems to be a lot of footage being leaked out of the Dark Knight Rises production. Probably unavoidable when you’re dealing with huge crowds of extras and uncredited stunt actors like in these scenes.

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