|  | PastPoop
 6/17/2003-But Seriously.......Friday, June 20th 2003 is a day I have waited for since I was 4 years 
        old. At last, my favorite comic book character gets his own movie and 
        it looks to be done pretty damn well. Following closely on the heels of 
        X2: X-Men United and Spider-Man, Hulk has a lot to live up to. The recent 
        boom of Marvel comics being ported to the silver screen with huge budgets 
        and big name actors is a good thing for geek fanboys like me. It's been 
        a gamble that has paid off since 1998 with the first Blade film. So far 
        out of six recently released big budget Marvel films, only one has sucked 
        and that was Daredevil. However, was Daredevil an omen of things to come?  Hollywood has fully embraced Marvel porting their books to film, however 
        if history is any teacher trends will find a decline. Enevietably the 
        market will soon be a sponge of saturation that will become a bad taste 
        to consumers, and even further, stupid scripts will be okayed for film 
        merely to cash in on the trend. Marvel denies this, but they have no less 
        than 17(!) projects in one stage of development or another. There has 
        to be some stinkers in there somewhere, I just hope the Hulk isn't one 
        of them....  Marvel isn't the only comic company being courted to make some more 
        cinematic goodness. Truthfully DC comics has had much better success in 
        earlier days with the Superman and first two Batman films. However, they 
        sank with the stinky 1995 release Batman Forever, followed by an even 
        worse Batman and Robin in 1997. Tim Burton did the first Batman films, 
        and Joel Schmuck-maker, I mean Schumaker (8MM and some other movies, can't 
        remember right now) handled Batman's film demise, but I recently learned 
        there are 3 Bat-flicks in development. Why? Because comic movies are bank 
        these days. Superman is destined to return, and other DC titles are scheduled 
        for production...Hawkman, Green Lantern, and even Jack Kirby's lamest 
        creation The Demon. At least they're doing Hellboy, but we'll see how 
        that turns out.  Indie and smaller publishers are getting a bite too. I've heard of a 
        forthcoming Lady Death and Evil Ernie movie (these titles are from Top 
        Cow Productions) as well as Fathom, Witchblade, (why? the show was poo, 
        movie is a bad idea.) and even get this.... a Flaming Carrot movie. It's 
        doubtful all of these will see the light of day, but someone is working 
        on these right now. I also forgot to mention another Spawn flick, but 
        Image, Spawn's publisher, is not exactly a small company anymore, but 
        yeah he gets another stab at flickdom too.  While I am excited about this, I am wary. I remember in the early 90's 
        people making fun of me for being a comic collector and Transformers fan. 
        Back in the early 90's as well, there was a surge of bad Marvel direct 
        to video movies; Captain America, The Punisher, even those awful Bill 
        Bixby/Lou Ferrigno Hulk made for tv movies.They were terrible, misguided, 
        and saw little success, except for the Hulk movies only because the show 
        was so misguidedly beloved.. Now comic movies are justifiably all the 
        rage, and could very well enter a pewpy decline that results in them becoming 
        a joke for VH-1's "I Love the 00's" twenty years from now. I 
        don't want to see that happen. My point here is merely for the comic companies 
        to truly put quality before quantity. Don't cash in on the trend, let 
        geeks like me look back on these years and be happy our childhood ascended 
        in culture but didn't become a cultural joke due to bad property handling 
        and lowest common denominator franchise pimping. Make the fans happy while 
        expanding to the masses, but not at the expense of the character. -Insidious_TPost A CommentRead Comments |  |