The FANTASTIC FOUR has not had a lot of
luck in Hollywood.
During the period of its bankruptcy,
Marvel sold the movie rights to several of it's properties to various
studios. The first film version of FANTASTIC FOUR, directed by the
legendary master of quick 'n' dirty film-making, Roger Corman, was
cranked out solely to prevent the rights from reverting back to
Marvel and so that the license-holder could sell the license to 20th
Century Fox; something which no one bothered to tell the cast and
crew. All prints of the film were destroyed, except for the
inevitable bootleg copies which quickly surfaced at sleazy dealers'
tables at comics conventions next to unauthorized VHS tapes of the
1990 CAPTAIN AMERICA and un-dubbed nth-generation copies of DIRTY
PAIR.
The 2005 movie had it's good points,
and introduced the public to Chris Evans, whose Johnny Storm was one
of the better things about it, and who later did an excellent job as
Steve Rogers in CAPTAIN AMERICA and AVENGERS. On the whole, though,
it was uneven. The character bits with Johnny and Ben were good, but
Reed came off as boring and Sue... well, to be honest Stan Lee wasn't
always sure what to do with Sue either. And as for Doctor Doom...
but I'll be getting to that.
The recent reboot had a rocky
relationship with the fans even before it was released, and not rocky
in a good, Ben Grimm sort of way. I didn't really care much when
fans howled about a black actor being cast to play Johnny Storm,
because I remembered how they howled over Idris Elba being cast as
Heimdall in THOR, and before that over Michael Clarke Duncan being
cast as Kingpin in DAREDEVIL, (of all the things wrong with the Ben
Affleck DAREDEVIL, a black Kingpin was far from the worst), and
before that over the rumors that Eddie Murphy would be cast as Robin
the Boy Wonder in the 1989 BATMAN; (which turned out to be untrue,
but made me wonder what Batman would be like with an all-black cast:
Michael Jackson as the Joker? Scatman Crothers as Alfred?)
The notion of a black Johnny didn't
bother me in the sense of taking a character who was white in the
comics and making him black; (The 2005 FF did that with Alicia
Masters, and frankly she was one of the more interesting characters
in the film); as much as I was afraid it would wreck the sibling
chemistry between Johnny and Sue. The sense that the Four are a
family has always been a big part of the comic's identity. The
trailers did much to reassure me that family would indeed be a theme
in the movie. Yet I couldn't help but wonder, if they absolutely had
to make the team more racially diverse, why they had to make the
hot-headed wise-cracking kid be the black one. Making Reed Richards
black would have been interesting.
But the fan anger over the
non-caucasian Human Torch was nothing compared to how they reacted
when Tony Kebell, the actor playing Doctor Doom made this startling
revelation:
“He's Victor Domashev, not Victor Von Doom in our story. And I'm sure I'll be sent to jail for telling you that. The Doom in ours – I'm a programmer. Very anti-social programmer. And on blogging sites I'm 'Doom'”
Well, in the final version his name was
changed back to “Von Doom”, but this points to a problem I think
the most recent film incarnations of the team has had: How do you
take a guy in armor and a cape calling himself “Doom” seriously?
Granted, George Lucas managed to pull
it off when he called the character “Darth Vader”; (I've read
that when STAR WARS was first released, more than one comics fan
looked at Vader and said, “It's Doctor Doom!” and that Lucas has
admitted to have used the character as a visual inspiration). And
the Roger Corman version stayed pretty close to the classic Doctor
Doom. But that might be the problem: a straight comics-to-film
adaptation of the FANTASTIC FOUR would look as cheesy as, well, the
Adam West BATMAN.
So how should the movies handle Doom?
As I see it, there are four essential problems with Doctor Doom.
First off is the name. Victor Von
Doom. Even the Marvel Ultimates comic book, which the latest movie
used as its inspiration, tried to distance itself from the cheesy
name by calling it's villain “Van Damm.” But you know, sometimes
you just gotta embrace the cheese. If I were writing a Fantastic
Four movie, this is how I would have it play out:
Early on, we would have a scene in
which Doctor Doom is mentioned. Perhaps there's an item on the TV
news about the King of Latveria coming to New York to address the UN
or something. Johnny mocks the name. “What kind of a name is 'Von
Doom?'”
“Actually, it's a fairly common name
in Latveria,” Reed explains. “I had a roomie in college from
Latveria, and his name was Doom. You remember Vic, don't you Ben?”
Ben snorts. “Yeah. What a horse's
patoot he was! Didn't he get kicked out of school when he blew up
that lab?”
Then later on, the group's adventures
would lead them to Latveria where they would meet Doom in person.
“Richards! We meet again at last!”
“What...? Wait... Vic? Is that you,
Vic? Well, I'll be a monkey's uncle. Hey, gang, this is Vic! I was
telling you about him. So, Vic, how's life been treating you?”
“SILENCE!!!”
The Ruritanian country of Latveria
actually works better today than it did back in the Silver Age. In a
modern setting, I could envision it as a breakaway Soviet republic
which suffered a period of political instability following the end of
the Soviet Union until a brilliant technological genius assumed
control of the government and revitalized its economy. True, his
record on human rights leaves something to be desired, but he has
brought a new level of prosperity and prestige to his tiny nation.
Even the castles and the cheesy Old World costumes can be seen as a
nationalistic revival after decades of Soviet domination.
Then there's the armor. Why would a
tin-pot dictator go around in public wearing a... well, a tin pot?
Here the movies were working under a distinct disadvantage. The
obvious way to address this issue would be to have somebody, probably
Johnny, comment that this guy must think he's Tony Stark or
something. The 20th Century Fox films, naturally, could
not invoke characters from the Avengers corner of the Marvel
Universe, but comparing Doom to Stark would give the audience a point
of reference. The mask is another problem. In the comics, Doom
wears the mask because his face is hideously scarred and he refuses
to let anybody see it. Hasn't he ever heard of plastic surgery?
They're doing wonderful things with skin grafts these days, you know.
I don't really have a good fix for this, other than just establish
it as a given and move on to something else.
The biggest problem the most recent
movies have had, in my opinion, is that they feel a need to combine
Doom's origin story with that of the rest of the group. Perhaps the
film-makers feel that the audience will be confused if they have more
than one origin in a movie; perhaps they felt that giving him a
connection to the Four would strengthen the narrative. I think they
were wrong.
Doom does not have super-powers in the
same sense that the other do; his body was not altered to give him
extraordinary abilities. Doom's power is his super-intellect; his
super-technology. Giving him metal skin instead of armor and bogus
“powers” instead of gadgets lessens him.
In addition, the Four are already a
distinct unit. They're a family; Doom's an outsider. As others have
noted, their powers are inspired by the four classical elements:
Earth, (Ben); Fire, (Johnny, of course); Water, (Reed is sort of
fluid, isn't he?); and Air, (okay, Sue's not a perfect fit but she's
close). Doom doesn't fit the theme. He's a fifth wheel. Okay, in
Chinese philosophy there is a fifth element, Metal, but having a
metal suit doesn't give him metal powers.
No, I think trying to graft Doom onto
the Four's origin is a mistake. Better to let him be his own man
with his own background. He already has a personal connection with
Reed; they knew each other back in college. That's enough of a
narrative link between the two. If we really want to push it
further, we could find a parallel between the hubris which led Doom
to the lab explosion which disfigured him, and Reed's recklessness in
bringing his friends on an experimental voyage without proper
radiation shielding. Lots of possibilities for angst there without
feeling a need to invent metal powers for Doom.
It will probably be a long time before
we get another cinematic look at Doctor Doom; possibly not until
Marvel regains the movie rights to the Fantastic Four, if that ever
happens. And if it does, the studios certainly won't go looking to
me for advice.
But for what it's worth, this is my
advice. Yes, the Fantastic Four comic can be cheesy; but being
embarrassed by it makes the cheesiness only more evident. Sometimes
you just gotta embrace the cheese.
So speaks Doom.
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