Advertisement

Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

[ Facebook comments]

Discuss the latest comic book news, read previews and reviews of upcoming and recent comic books, talk about comics, vote on your favorites, and more!

Hey you! Reader! Want to be a part of the GREATEST COMIC BOOK AND GEEK COMMUNITY on the web?! Logged in users see WAY LESS ADS, so why not register? It's fast and it's easy, like your mom! Sign up today! Membership spots are limited!*

*Membership spots not really limited!

LOLtron
User avatar
YOU WILL NEED A NURSE
 
Posts: 19330
Joined: Mon May 18, 2009 2:54 pm


Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

Postby LOLtron » Fri Aug 19, 2011 1:49 am

The Nerds of the Roundtable have seen a lot of comics on the big screen.  Here are some of their favorites!


In Outhouse Roundtable, Royal Nonesuch gathers the writing staff of The Outhouse to find out where they stand in the landscape of comic book fandom. The formula is simple: one question, a joyous multitude of answers.

Week 9: What are your favorite works (film, television, novelizations, etc.) adapted from comics?

Royal Nonesuch:

I really enjoyed the film adaptation of Harvey Pekar's American Splendor. It was a great way to bring Pekar's work, and by extension his life, into the realm of sound and motion. I really loved the post-modern effect of bringing the real Harvey, and his friends and family into the film itself to share some cake (as well as get interviewed by directors Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini throughout the film). But it was the sensitive portrayal of Harvey by Paul Giamatti (still his best performance to date) as well as Hope Davis' Joyce Brabner that made the movie so engaging.

I also really liked The Dark Knight and the first two Spider-Man films, as well as Tim Burton's first Batman flick.

Punchy:

I'm fairly undemanding when it comes to comics adaptations, I'm not one of those fanskickass0002_3373807_354720a who demands 100% accuracy and fidelity to the source material. As long as it's recognisable as Batman or Spider-Man, I'm grand. So I love all the Spidey movies, the first 2 Superman movies, the Nolan Bat-movies, the X-Movies (even X3) and the current spate of Marvel 'Avengers Franchise' movies are just amazing.

But I think my favourite adaptation may actually be Kick-Ass, because it improved on the original comics. Whilst I like Millar and Romita's book, there's a mean, nihilistic streak that runs through it that is replaced with something a little less cynical in the movie. The movie is just a lot more fun, and makes Dave Lizewski and Big Daddy less pathetic. I like both versions of the story, but the movie is the one I'd be more likely to revisit.

And you have to mention the various 'Timmverse' DC cartoons, beginning with the best interpretation of Batman ever, through to Superman, Justice League Unlimited and Batman Beyond, Bruce Timm, Paul Dini and Dwayne McDuffie created a DCU that's in many ways better than the one in the comics. Their recent spate of feature-length adaptations are also fantastic, particularly All-Star Superman. I also like the non-Timm cartoons, Teen Titans and Young Justice are great. Marvel's cartoons are less good, but I really enjoyed Spectacular Spider-Man.

Eli Katz:

Road to Perdition
is one of my favorite adaptations. Here's why: It's Paul Newman's last great performance, and it's an unflinching portrayal of an old Irish mob boss, John Rooney. Yes, Rooney dresses well and he lives well and, like any half-intelligent Irishman, he has a gift for the gab. But deep down, below all the charm and wit, is a soulless gangster.

Newman had a fifty-year career in Hollywood playing various antiheroes, from Fast Eddie Felson and Cool Hand Luke to Butch Cassidy and Frank Galvin. He played straight-up bad guys infrequently, by comparison, but he did play two particularly memorable villains -- first, early in his career as the title character in Hud and, second, at the end of his career as Rooney. They are very different types of villains. And yet they share somethiroad_to_perditionng in common: Newman plays with the audience, at times encouraging -- perhaps persuading -- viewers to look past all the hate and evil of these characters and to focus instead on their charisma. He manipulates the audience into liking his villains, if only momentarily. And this manipulation helps us understand why these villains, Rooney in particular, are so good at duping and ultimately backstabbing people. Newman shows us why Rooney, a tired old man, very near the end of his life and career, can remain on top in such a cutthroat world.

Any source material that can inspire such an excellent performance deserves much praise. That's why I consider Road to Perdition a top comic book adaptation.

J.M. Hunter:

I'm going with Blade 1. It launched the successful comic book movie phenom and re-imagined a character that was short of a Luke Cage with a pointy stick knock off visually. Not to mention the constant confusing origins and whether or not Blade is half white. If the comics could get a clue from the movie franchise it'd help.

Amoebas:

300
- it literally was the comic book set in live action. Scene for scene it was panel for panel.


Written or Contributed by: Royal Nonesuch


http://www.theouthousers.com/index.php/features/the-roundtable/15320-outhouse-roundtable-from-one-to-the-other.html/
Image

Advertisement

GLX
User avatar
Outhouse Editor
 
Posts: 37392
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2008 9:40 pm
Title: Leader of The Society


Re: Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

Postby GLX » Fri Aug 19, 2011 7:12 pm

I still need to see Road to Perdition.
Image

john lewis wrote:Everyone but GLX has no taste.

fieldy snuts
User avatar
YOU WILL NEED A NURSE
 
Posts: 15807
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 9:34 pm
Location: The 3040
Title: Burrr
Formerly: Sweet James Jones


Online


Re: Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

Postby fieldy snuts » Fri Aug 19, 2011 10:30 pm

The Mask of Zorro is easily one of my favourite adaptions...everything Nolan did with Batman, this movie did it first, but a bit more light hearted.

Pity the sequel screwed up so badly. The first one was almost perfect.

Zechs
User avatar
Staff Writer
 
Posts: 40864
Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 10:10 pm
Location: From Parts Unknown
Title: Deposted Despot
Formerly: Blight, Deacon Frost, Heinrich Himmler of S_D


Re: Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

Postby Zechs » Sat Aug 20, 2011 1:58 am

I have to go with the original TMNT movie. It blended the original stories from Mirage comics so perfectly in live action. Everything about that film just clicks. The film gave everyone their moment and it was perfect. It was the film that got everything right in it's first try. Then.. the fucking concerned parents had to ruin it for the two sequels of it being too violent. :smt013 Regardless.. the movie had the best entrances from the heroes to of course.. the villain.



As someone says about this scene above just covers that perfectly: Cinematic lighting. Great score. Dramatic angles. His movements in something as simple as walking in and looking at his subjects, are smooth and ominous. His first in command bows to him and pulls his cape back to reveal the blades on his shoulders. He is a king, He doesn't need to throw a single punch or kick to show that he is to be feared. Within 1 minute and 1 long camera shot, you see his full character summarized perfectly.


I do love Road to Perdition though. The scene at the end with Rooney is just.. wow. It's Newman and Hanks at their very best. My only issue with The Mask of Zorro is the secondary villain of the film (not Stuart Wilson, he was great villain you want to hate, but don't, but do throughout the film). The whole psychopathic angle with his lackey US Officer buddy (his little jar collection) was a bit too over the top and didn't need to be tacked on.
Image
Image



sdsichero wrote:
I especially like and admire Zechs. He's everything I wish I could be!

Dragavon wrote:Zechs... is...

Zechs...is...

I can't say it. It's too horrible. Zechs...is...not...wrong...

mightymouse
User avatar
Whale Castrato
 
Posts: 109
Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2008 9:29 pm


Re: Outhouse Roundtable: From One to the Other

Postby mightymouse » Sat Aug 20, 2011 10:00 am

Ghost World

leave a comment with facebook


Return to The News Stand



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: LobsterJ, prozacman and 45 guests

Advertisement
cron