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Superheroes come of age

With 'Batman Begins' and 'Superman Returns', Chris Tilly believes the superhero flick has finally grown up.

Jul 18 2006

The superhero movie has finally come of age. With last summer's 'Batman Begins' and last week's 'Superman Returns', comic book movies have finally shaken off the shackles of adolescence and entered the adult world with mature movies of passion, power and substance.

Of course there will always be a place for the 'Flash Gordon', 'Fantastic Four', 'Blade' and 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' of this world, but in the last year Christopher Nolan and Bryan Singer have taken the genre to the next level.

Singer started down the path with the first two 'X-Men' movies, big budget blockbusters that featured thoughtful, thought-provoking (if somewhat simplistic) subtexts about tolerance, acceptance and understanding.

But with 'Superman Returns' he's truly nailed it – a superhero flick that would work perfectly well without the superhero element. A touching, old-fashioned love story that just happens to revolve around the most powerful man on earth.

Same goes for Nolan's 'Batman Begins', a thrilling superhero epic that was full of action and spectacle, yet at its heart was a psychological drama about a deeply troubled young man coming to terms with the loss of his parents.

Marrying the wide-eyed innocence of comic book youth with more grown-up themes is no easy task however. Alex Proyas and Ang Lee both tried and failed with 'The Crow' and 'Hulk' respectively, and their po-faced entries into the genre managed only cult success.

And while 'Sin City' looked great, it engaged neither the mind nor the heart and failed to inspire that child-like sense of wonder and joy that the greatest superhero efforts achieve.

But Nolan and Singer (and to some extent Sam Raimi with his 'Spider-Man' flicks) have managed to take stories that were originally aimed at children and given them truly universal appeal.

In striking the perfect balance between comic book simplicity and silver screen substance, they've changed the genre forever, and with sequels planned to both films, from here on in it seems that the sky's the limit for the superhero flick!

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User comments on this story

  • nilay said...
    I agree with Chris - the new Superman and Batman movies are downright perfect. The spider-Man movies are good, but in the last one Raimi so laboured the 'with great power comes great responsibility' point that by the end of the film I was tearing my hair out! Posted on Jul 19 2006 10:43
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  • James Bower said...
    I found Raimi's Spider-man flicks to be the most focused and engaging of all the recent superhero films. They capture the essence of the character - the most relatable in comics - perfectly. Provided he doesn't choose to stay on for more than three films(JK Simmons recently leaked this possibility), Raimi's trilogy will also, ideally, give unity and closure to a great three-movie story arc (Singer's choice to do Superman robbed the X-men of this chance). I found that Superman Returns lacked the emotional depth of either Spider-Man or Batman Begins, and leaned too heavily towards a Richard Donner tribute movie. Posted on Jul 19 2006 10:14
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  • Am said...
    Raimi nailed Spider-Man. Its good to be able to watch a movie that so accurately portrays the comics, and still has such enormous appeal.
    "to some extent" indeed! Posted on Jul 19 2006 09:18
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