Red square 5th December 2008 Red square  

Fantastic Four (2005) Movie Review

Fantastic Four (2005) Movie Credits:

Fantastic Four (2005)

richcline's score:
2 out of 5

Average Score

0 out of 5

based on 0 ratings

No-one wants to see this movie.

Log in to rate this movie!


Report bad or inappropriate content

Fantastic Four (2005) Directed by:

Tim Story

Fantastic Four (2005) Written by:

Mark Frost, Michael France

Fantastic Four (2005) Cast:

Michael Chiklis, Ioan Gruffudd, Chris Evans, Jessica Alba, Julian McMahon, Maria Menounos, Kerry Washington, Hamish Linklater, Laurie Holden

Fantastic Four (2005) U.S. Distributor:

20th Century Fox

Fantastic Four (2005) U.K. Distributor:

20th Century Fox

Fantastic Four (2005) U.S. Cinema Release Date:

8th Jul 2005

Fantastic Four (2005) U.K. Cinema Release Date:

22nd Jul 2005

Add a review for this movie:

This Week's US Cinema Releases:

This Week's UK Cinema Releases:

Fantastic Four (2005) Synopsis:

Marvel's first family of comic superheroes takes the world by storm as the longest running comic book series in history comes to the big screen. The Fantastic Four are: Reed Richards / Mr. Fantastic, who can elongate his body; Susan Storm / Invisible Woman, who not only can become invisible at will but can render other objects invisible; Johnny Storm / Human Torch, who can shoot fire from his finger tips and bend flame; and Ben Grimm / The Thing, a hideously misshapen monster with superhuman strength. Together, they battle the evil Doctor Doom.

Fantastic Four (2005) Review:

There's so much potential in this comic book that it came as a serious shock when Tim Story was named as director; after making an OK comedy (Barbershop) and a truly awful action romp (Taxi), he's handed the archetypal Marvel Comics movie? Alas, there's no surprise: Despite a good cast, this is a badly made film that only barely works as brainless filler.

Reed Richards (Gruffudd) is a scientist who needs the help of rich businessman Victor Von Doom (McMahon) to launch a study trip in space with his sidekick (Chiklis). Von Doom adds his own assistant, Reed's ex (Alba), to the team, as well as her cocky brother (Evans). Then a freak space storm changes their DNA, creating four superheroes (earth, wind, fire and, erm, rubber) and a super-villain (electricity), who square off for control of the city. Or something.

You don't expect credibility from this kind of movie, but this script, which feels patched together from various drafts, doesn't even try to be coherent or logical. Or to touch on any themes in the story. It feels like it was written and directed by and for 10-year-olds. The direction is haphazard and lacklustre; the film is only watchable because the cast visibly strains to add charm whenever they can, despite the corny dialog. Only Chiklis succeeds in creating a believable character; Gruffudd is blandly handsome, Alba is annoyingly lovelorn and Evans is mere eye candy. McMahon is interesting until the script turns him into a pointless megalomaniac then senselessly covers his face with an expressionless mask.

Some sequences are fairly enjoyable, but the film lurches and struggles to maintain any sense of momentum, throwing in irrelevant action (like a meaningless snowboard sequence with a dud punchline), endless groan-worthy puns in the dialog and on screen, and a turgid love triangle. Even the effects feel rushed and simplistic. As a B-movie it does have its pleasures, mostly in Evans' thoughtless enthusiasm and the durable premise itself. Which certainly deserved a much better movie than this. But if you hire hack filmmakers, this is what you get.

About the Author:

My Movie Points

0

Movies Reviewed

0

Movies Scored

0

Comment on this review:

Other comments: