First rule of Horrorthon is: watch horror movies. Second rule of Horrorthon is: write about it. Warn us. Tempt us. The one who watches the most movies in 31 days wins. There is no prize.
Monday, July 28, 2008
Comic-Con wrap-up: Are superheroes done for?
By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY
SAN DIEGO — Jackie Earle Haley steps inside of the Night Owl's spaceship, walking gingerly past the pilot's seats toward the control panel, touching the blinking gauges and dials.
"It's still a little hard to believe," the balding, bespectacled actor says, "that I'm playing a superhero."
But if this year's Comic-Con convention, which wrapped up Sunday, has demonstrated anything, it's that comic-book and superhero movies are not what they used to be.
If anything, they're the opposite.
Gone are the lantern-jawed heroes whose raison d'être was to save mankind from villains threatening to wipe out the populace.
Instead, the anti-hero rules. He drinks heavily. He has problems performing in bed. He's as likely to kill an innocent as an evildoer. Often, he doesn't care that much for people.
And he's getting hired by the truckloads by Hollywood. After a summer that has seen antithetical superheroes rack up nearly $1 billion, studios can't get enough crime-fighter movies into production, even ones with some unlikely protagonists.
There are more than 42 comic-book and superhero movies in production, and the heroes range from the obvious (Robert Downey Jr. and Tobey Maguire reprising their roles as Iron Man and Spider-Man) to the head-scratching (Seth Rogen as the Green Hornet?).
Even Haley, who returned to big-screen prominence as a pederast in Little Children, concedes he never saw himself as the crusading type.
"When I first started acting, the last thing I thought of was being a superhero," he says as he walks through the spaceship used in Watchmen, the ultimate anti-hero film, due March 6. The 9,000-pound spaceship was rolled onto the floor of the convention and became the most popular display of the five-day pop-culture festival.
"I'm probably the last guy you'd think of playing a superhero," Haley says, signing autographs and taking pictures with fans, some of them dressed as his character, the shadowy hero Rorschach. "I'm no Superman."
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1 comment:
There's some interesting stuff in that article, but the "done for" headline is total crap (and pretty much based on one guy's opinion of what Hancock signifies).
One thing c-books have going for them is that they come out every month; there's just a sheer amount of material on hand, and they've covered tons of narrative ideas that movies are just discovering.
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