Plot
Four young outsiders teleport to an alternate and dangerous universe which alters their physical form in shocking ways. The four must learn to harness their new abilities and work together to save Earth from a former friend turned enemy.
Release Year: 2015
Rating: 5.4/10 (1,797 voted)
Critic's Score: 32/100
Director: Josh Trank
Stars: Miles Teller, Kate Mara, Michael B. Jordan
Storyline
FANTASTIC FOUR, a contemporary re-imagining of Marvel's original and longest-running superhero team, centers on four young outsiders who teleport to an alternate and dangerous universe, which alters their physical form in shocking ways. Their lives irrevocably upended, the team must learn to harness their daunting new abilities and work together to save Earth from a former friend turned enemy.
Writers: Simon Kinberg, Jeremy Slater
Cast: Miles Teller -
Reed Richards
Michael B. Jordan -
Johnny Storm
Kate Mara -
Sue Storm
Jamie Bell -
Ben Grimm /
The Thing
Toby Kebbell -
Victor Von Doom /
Dr. Doom
Reg E. Cathey -
Dr. Franklin Storm
Tim Blake Nelson -
Dr. Allen
Joshua Montes -
Quarterback Speech School Kid
Dan Castellaneta -
Mr. Kenny
Owen Judge -
Young Reed
Kylen Davis -
Teasing School Kid
Evan Hannemann -
Young Ben
Chet Hanks -
Jimmy Grimm
Mary-Pat Green -
Mrs. Grimm
Tim Heidecker -
Mr. Richards
Taglines:
When you change the world, prepare to defend it.
Trivia:
Runs the same time, 1 hr 46 min as Fantastic Four (2005) previously did. See more »
Quotes:
User Review
Author:
Rating: 3/10
So when I saw that they're "rebooting" Fantastic Four, I thought, "this
could actually be really good. This has the chance to start things over
and be something great." The trailers showed potential - they featured
a new premise with some great new concepts. Also, take note that I'm
not a superhero/comic book fan. I am a filmmaker, though.
I think the first major clue for me that this movie was doomed was,
surprisingly, its tagline. "Change is coming". As a filmmaker, I know
that a big concept movies want to have nowadays is "everything changes"
- the idea that everything is started over or some big event is going
to happen. One of The Amazing Spider-Man 2's taglines was "everything
changes". Transformers 4 had the tagline of "the rules have changed"
and "everything will change". This film's taglines are "change is
coming", and "when you change the world, prepare to defend it". Movie
taglines dealing with "change" are typically weak and overused methods
of making movies seem like they're creating a "clean slate", or better
yet and in this case, a reboot of some sort.
Another major clue for me that this movie was doomed was, also
surprisingly, its running time of 100 minutes. Why? Because when you
have a film like this - a reboot, where it has to introduce various new
characters, set them up and a new premise/universe, the movie isn't
going to be an hour and a half long. It's going to be two hours. Those
extra twenty- thirty minutes can make a difference. For the record, the
first two Fantastic Four movies had around the same running time. The
original film was only six minutes longer. But that movie wasn't the
best one, either.
I reminded myself of X-Men. X-Men was a great movie. It had a similar
running time, but not the same task, as it wasn't a reboot. Yet as the
first installment in a franchise, it did a fantastic job at setting
things up. There isn't much that's fantastic about Fantastic Four.
Now to tell you what's wrong with this movie. First off, the pacing.
The running time really is a problem. This film is rushed beyond belief
and its plot is nonsensical. The characters' introductions are decent
enough, particularly the Fantastic Four, but their roles throughout the
entire film are thrown off by the bad pacing. Second, the plot. As I
said above, the film's plot seemed interesting. It had potential and it
looked like it could go somewhere. There are even hints at awesome
things to come. But it's in shambles. You hope and feel it will go
somewhere but in its hour and a half running time, it feels so empty.
That's because of the third thing, the writing. The writing isn't good
- the film's climactic conflict feels backed up into the end of the
movie, as in there wasn't enough time to set it up. Before this, the
bad writing caused the plot to feel scattered, and that caused the film
to feel empty. I also want to add that I honestly don't know why the
Torch was played by a black actor. Again, I'm not a comic-book fan, and
I'm certainly not racist, but I know enough to know that the Torch is
white. I don't understand why they couldn't keep him that way. On top
of that, the actor who portrayed him did a pretty poor job at it, so it
was a complete failure. Nevertheless, there are much bigger things
wrong with this movie. Speaking of things, The Thing is entirely CGI in
this movie. No make- up, costume or anything - just a giant, naked rock
monster. Yes, he's naked, too. Not even any shorts.
Reboots, remakes, prequels and sequels are pouring in nowadays, and
many of them are constantly bombing. Fantastic Four is, unfortunately,
one of them.
By the way, a sequel is set to come out in June 2017. Good thing they
announced that before the film came out ... a few months ago, of
course. If you know what happened to The Amazing Spider-Man series, you
may know what could very well happen here. Ultimately, while I wasn't
pleased with the film, I do hope you enjoy it more than I did.
Plot
A group of astronauts gain superpowers after a cosmic radiation exposure and must use them to oppose the plans of their enemy, Doctor Victor Von Doom
Release Year: 2005
Rating: 5.7/10 (108,219 voted)
Critic's Score: 40/100
Director:
Tim Story
Stars: Ioan Gruffudd, Michael Chiklis, Chris Evans
Storyline Reed Richards, a brilliant but timid and bankrupt scientist, is convinced that evolution can be triggered by clouds of cosmic energy, and has calculated that Earth is going to pass one of these clouds soon. Together with his friend and partner, the gruff yet gentle astronaut muscle-man Ben Grimm, Reed convinces his conceited MIT classmate Dr. Victor Von Doom, now CEO of his own enterprise, to allow him access to his privately-owned space station. Von Doom agrees in exchange for control over the experiment and a majority of the profits from whatever benefits it brings. He thus brings aboard Susan Storm, his shy, though assertive chief genetics researcher and a former lover of Reed's with whom she had an acrimonious break-up, and her diametrically opposed brother Johnny, the maverick and hot-headed playboy pilot. The astronauts make it home intact; however, before long they begin to mutate...
Writers: Mark Frost, Michael France
Cast: Ioan Gruffudd
-
Reed Richards
Jessica Alba
-
Sue Storm
Chris Evans
-
Johnny Storm
Michael Chiklis
-
Ben Grimm
Julian McMahon
-
Victor von Doom
Hamish Linklater
-
Leonard
Kerry Washington
-
Alicia Masters
Laurie Holden
-
Debbie McIlvane
David Parker
-
Ernie
Kevin McNulty
-
Jimmy O'Hoolihan
Maria Menounos
-
Sexy Nurse
Michael Kopsa
-
Ned Cecil
Andrew Airlie
-
Compound Doctor
Pascale Hutton
-
Nightclub Girlfriend
G. Michael Gray
-
Nightclub Boyfriend
Taglines:
4 times the action. 4 times the adventure. 4 times the fantastic.
Release Date: 8 July 2005
Filming Locations: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $100,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $56,061,504
(USA)
(10 July 2005)
(3602 Screens)
Gross: $330,120,875
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:|
USA:
(extended edition)
Did You Know?
Trivia:
This was the third superhero movie to be released in 2005, after
Elektra and
Batman Begins.
Goofs:
Revealing mistakes:
When Doom hits Ben with the light pole and Ben hits the ground, concrete from the street comes up before he actually hits the pavement.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Ben Grimm:
Typical of Victor Von Doom to build a 30 foot statue of himself.
User Review
Truly enjoyable.
Rating: 10/10
This film was well put together, fun, and didn't take itself at all
seriously. I am not sure where the negative hype comes from, but I find
when a good film gets bad reviews, that means most people just didn't
get it. In this case, perhaps from the last few comic book films that
attempted to "mean something," I think people forgot how to enjoy
themselves. Laden with kitsch and tongue-in-cheek humor, this movie
embraces that it comes from a comic book and allows itself to be big
and a little silly. Yes, Jessica Alba wears an impossibly tight
jumpsuit. Yes, the Human Torch is so slick and charming that, if you
met him in real life, he'd get a solid smack for his arrogance. But
this isn't real life, people, in case you forgot-this is the Marvel
Universe, where clothes are tight and the dialog...isn't. Who cares?
This movie is so fun that you wish these people did exist and would
take some media focus off the jerks that are in the public eye.
0