X-Men 1 and Batman Begins joking about costumes and the irony
Dec 4, 2018 17:07:59 GMT
kleinreturns likes this
Post by Skaathar on Dec 4, 2018 17:07:59 GMT
First Class
Days of future past
old man logan
the death of wolverine
god love man kills.
fox already greenlighted new mutants based on a horror classic and xforce which are the grittier ,more violent side of the xmen team. disney cant greenlight this movies.
If fox has kept the right none of these stories will be hard to adapt as they made more movies and no I dont want to see xmen movies every year or twice a year. a movie every 2 years was fine. if stories are too gritty like messiah war, the apocalypse solution or the mutant massacre they will just use r rating.fox can adapt any xmen stories because they are not restricted like Disney is and dont need to dumb down their movies.
the good thing is xmen already had movies like star wars and the genre is already disgraced so once mcu xmen fails like disney star wars it wont matter. it will only hurt disney.
remember this are xmen stories that even TAS could not dumb down. and that was a cartoon. the same cartoon that is more mature than your mcu movies.
The First Class, DOFP and Logan (Death of Wolverine) movies from Fox share similar elements of their plot with the comics as well as some key players but by and large the storylines of the movies are pretty different from the comics. If this is your definition of "proper adaption" then the MCU also did proper adaptions of Civil War and Infinity War... both way more complex than the aforementioned X-men titles.
The only title you mentioned that was properly adapted to screen was God Loves, Man kills. And that's only because it's a very straightforward plot. Simple. Easy. That's what Fox is good at. Simple, straightforward storylines. Anything more complex and nuanced (like the Dark Phoenix storyline) falls through the cracks. Fox's most successful movies (DOFP, Logan, First Class) took some inspiration from comicbook storylines but had to dumb them down to transition into movies.

