Total Film

Fantastic Four

It’s yawning time.

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It al looked so good for Josh Trank a few months ago. A cult superhero flick to his name in 2012’s Chronicle. A majorleagu­e Marvel movie in the can. And a Star Wars spin-off in the offing. And then came the mysterious departure from Star Wars and rumours of reshoots on said Marvel movie, whose initial cool promise became infected by bad buzz.

So, is the end result an epic fail? No, but it’s certainly no major upgrade on Tim Story’s barrel-scraping 2005 effort or its Rise Of The Silver Surfer sequel. Echoing Spider-Man’s somewhat premature 2012 reboot, Trank’s origin story brings nothing new to the party, apart from a rather muted, real-world aesthetic that counters the colourful worlds dreamed up by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in the original Marvel comics. Such an approach might work for, say, Batman – but it doesn’t fit the Fantastic Four.

Scripted by Trank, X-Men regular Simon Kinberg and Jeremy Slater, it’s the sort of self-important, humourless story that leaves you yearning for Robert Downey Jr. to pop up with an Iron Man quip. In denial that it’s even a superhero film (“They’re not powers,” claims Kate Mara’s newly-invisible Sue Storm), it’s not until Jamie Bell’s Ben Grimm – aka rock-monster The Thing – yells his classic “clobbering time” catchphras­e in the denouement that this disparate bunch even remotely resembles the Fantastic Four. Perhaps ‘The Adolescent Arses’ might’ve been a better title.

Storm brewing

The running time is a brief 99 minutes, yet Trank spends at least half of it watching our heroes brought together in a daring experiment to teleport matter. Leading the charge is Reed Richards (Miles Teller), who has been building his own such machine since the fifth grade with childhood friend Ben. Winning over Dr. Franklin Storm (Reg E. Cathey), he’s given a scholarshi­p to the Baxter Institute, where he’s introduced to Storm’s adopted brainiac daughter Sue and the equally

smart Victor Von Doom (Toby Kebbell).

As it turns out, Reed’s early experiment­s have achieved similar results to those at Baxter: transporti­ng matter to another dimension. “That place could explain the origin of our species,” marvels Dr. Storm, in one of the many dreadful save-the-world speeches poor Cathey (so good in House Of Cards) must deliver. Joined by Storm’s tearaway son Johnny (Michael B. Jordan), it’s not long before Trank’s team crack matter transporta­tion – with Tim Blake Nelson’s suit threatenin­g to take it all to those big boys at NASA.

Irked by this developmen­t, Reed, Johnny and Victor decide to test it out, to be the first humans to set foot on Planet Zero, as it gets dubbed. Bringing along old friend Ben for the ride, it doesn’t quite go to plan – what with Victor falling to his certain, ahem, doom and the others arriving back engulfed in radioactiv­e energy. Even poor old Sue at the control desk gets a dose. Finally, almost an hour into proceeding­s, the Four’s freakish abilities come to the fore.

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That’s flame-proof lycra and, apparently, flame-proof hair.

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