areaseven Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 In less than two weeks, Warner Bros./Legendary Pictures' film adaptation of the DC Comics antihero Jonah Hex. Josh Brolin (Brand in The Goonies, Llewelyn Moss in No Country for Old Men) stars as the title character alongside John Malkovich (Being John Malkovich, Basie in Empire of the Sun), Michael Fassbender (Hicox in Inglorious Basterds, Stelios in 300), Michael Shannon (John in Revolutionary Road, Buehl in 8 Mile) and Will Arnett (Stranz Van Waldenberg in Blades of Glory, Lou in Semi-Pro). Megan Fox, who was just ousted from the production of Transformers 3, stars as the leading lady. Given a reputable cast, Jonah Hex has the potential to be a good comic book movie. However, having Megan Fox in the film might have a polarizing effect, given that there's been more publicity on her than the film itself. Will this movie be a good adaptation, or will Megan Fox jinx it? Official Jonah Hex Site Quote
Einherjar Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 (edited) I agree with Iron Man. Edited June 6, 2010 by Einherjar Quote
eriku Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 I don't think Megan has the power to be positive or negative. She's pretty much the epitome of bland neutrality. That said, I saw the trailer for this before Splice last night and it looks fun. Quote
anime52k8 Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 (edited) the horse-mounted, hand-cranked Gatling guns just make me think of that awful Wild Wild West remake with Will Smith. I might check it out but I don't have high expectations. Edited June 6, 2010 by anime52k8 Quote
one_klump Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 the horse-mounted, hand-cranked Gatling guns just make me think of that awful Wild Wild West remake with Will Smith. I might check it out but I don't have high expectations. See, when I see hand cranked Gatling guns mounted on a horse, I think "Awesome". I also thought "Awesome" when I saw the Dynamite Crossbow. I'm expecting that to show up in one of my D&D games now. Its a summer movie. A popcorn flick. It was meant to be fun and entertaining, not make you question the way you live or give you an epiphany of some sort. Quote
Ghost Train Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 (edited) Low expectations is the core principle of happiness. Edited June 6, 2010 by Ghost Train Quote
Einherjar Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 The role they gave her is both ironic and played out. The trailer makes her Mikaela in the wild west, or a modern call girl with a funny accent. Quote
Roy Focker Posted June 6, 2010 Posted June 6, 2010 Never heard of it. Me too. Who cares if it is good adaptation or if Meg does a good job as this Johah character. Does anyone know the source material? I don't nor do I care. Quote
Einherjar Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Me too. Who cares if it is good adaptation or if Meg does a good job as this Johah character. Does anyone know the source material? I don't nor do I care. He was given an episode on Batman: The Animated Series and used no magic to get the job done. Quote
Graham Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Vaguely recall hearing the character's name, i.e. I know its a minor DC charcter, but have absolutely no idea what it's about, beyond being cowboy-ish? Sorry, no interest. My taste in Cowboy movies runs to anything with Clint Eastwood in, or The Wild Bunch. Graham Quote
areaseven Posted June 7, 2010 Author Posted June 7, 2010 Vaguely recall hearing the character's name, i.e. I know its a minor DC charcter, but have absolutely no idea what it's about, beyond being cowboy-ish? Sorry, no interest. My taste in Cowboy movies runs to anything with Clint Eastwood in, or The Wild Bunch. Graham How about Tombstone? You must have at least seen it once, right? Quote
Keith Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 He was given an episode on Batman: The Animated Series and used no magic to get the job done. To be fair, until hearing about the movie, I thought that actually had something to do with Batman Quote
Keith Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 the horse-mounted, hand-cranked Gatling guns just make me think of that awful Wild Wild West remake with Will Smith. I might check it out but I don't have high expectations. In order to be good, this film will have to be more Adventures of Brisco County Jr, and less Wild Wild West. Quote
Agent ONE Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 That movie is like every action cliche at once. Quote
reddsun1 Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Just from the snippets I've seen in the trailers, this looks to be a real stinker. Dialogue sounds hackneyed and crude, like it's gonna be a bunch of one-liners and toilet humor, dumbed down to the lowest common denominator. Damn shame that the younger generations coming up behind us will grow up thinking absolute nonsense like this to be somewhere near historically accurate or true... Not that Once Upon A Time In The West is a Tour de Force or anything--but Jeezus. Horse-mounted gatling guns? Dynamite crossbows? For fu**'s sake. Just stop the stupidity please. Quote
reddsun1 Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Just from the snippets I've seen in the trailers, this looks to be a real stinker. Dialogue sounds hackneyed and crude, like it's gonna be a bunch of one-liners and toilet humor, dumbed down to the lowest common denominator. Damn shame that the younger generations coming up behind us will grow up thinking absolute nonsense like this to be somewhere near historically accurate or true... Not that Once Upon A Time In The West is a Tour de Force or anything--but Jeezus. Horse-mounted gatling guns? Dynamite crossbows? For fu**'s sake. Just stop the stupidity please. ed: and yes, Tombstone. KICKS. ASS. "Ah'm your Huckleberry..." The historical events that inspired the legend of Wyatt Earp are just as good as any Hollywood make-believe. The real Wyatt Earp would bit*h slap Jonah Hex with his Peacemaker... Quote
Penguin Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Me too. Who cares if it is good adaptation or if Meg does a good job as this Johah character. Does anyone know the source material? I don't nor do I care. Well if ya don't care, then why ask? My brother's a Jonah Hex fan, so I've ended up absorbing more than I wanted to. Jonah Hex is a bounty hunter, whose career starts up just after the civil war. His original comic run was played pretty straight, and he's got a whole back story that isn't too ludicrous. Fairly well-developed personality. After the first run, they jumped the shark and took him into a post-apocalyptic future. After that killed the comic, there were a couple of revivals under the "Vertigo" imprint that added some supernatural, Lovecraft-esque elements with varying success (my brother hated those, for what that's worth). He's got an ongoing series again that returned to the straight western action hero roots. I actually collected a few issues of the new run, and they were pretty good. Not that any of this has anything to do with the movie or is any predictor of quality. What I've read says there's a new origin story, a supernatural aspect thrown in, and the whole steam-punk-ish thing with "old West" technology like the horse mounted gatlings and the crossbow. Frankly, it all looks more than a little silly to me. Quote
eriku Posted June 7, 2010 Posted June 7, 2010 Just from the snippets I've seen in the trailers, this looks to be a real stinker. Dialogue sounds hackneyed and crude, like it's gonna be a bunch of one-liners and toilet humor, dumbed down to the lowest common denominator. Damn shame that the younger generations coming up behind us will grow up thinking absolute nonsense like this to be somewhere near historically accurate or true... Not that Once Upon A Time In The West is a Tour de Force or anything--but Jeezus. Horse-mounted gatling guns? Dynamite crossbows? For fu**'s sake. Just stop the stupidity please. I think you're overlooking the fact that this is a comic book movie based on an over-the-top comic book character. It's pulp fiction. It's not supposed to be any kind of realistic or historically accurate narrative. I sincerely doubt anyone, regardless of age, will go into or come out of this film thinking it's somehow based on real world events. It's no different than something like the anime Trigun, and I don't recall anyone mistaking that for reality. Quote
Keith Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 I think you're overlooking the fact that this is a comic book movie based on an over-the-top comic book character. It's pulp fiction. It's not supposed to be any kind of realistic or historically accurate narrative. I sincerely doubt anyone, regardless of age, will go into or come out of this film thinking it's somehow based on real world events. It's no different than something like the anime Trigun, and I don't recall anyone mistaking that for reality. Dude, Nicholas D. Wolfood's turd wouldn't go see this movie! Quote
reddsun1 Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 I think you're overlooking the fact that this is a comic book movie based on an over-the-top comic book character. It's pulp fiction. It's not supposed to be any kind of realistic or historically accurate narrative. I sincerely doubt anyone, regardless of age, will go into or come out of this film thinking it's somehow based on real world events. It's no different than something like the anime Trigun, and I don't recall anyone mistaking that for reality. Oh no, not necessarily real world events that would warrant the old "This story is based on actual events...certain incidents, characters and timelines have been changed.." disclaimer, per se. I guess the disturbing aspect for me is that there is probably far too great a number of intellectually stunted people out there, who'll see stuff like this and think the Civil War was fought with things like the dynamite crossbows, or tank-turreted wagons, or cast-iron steam-powered jet-packs... Quote
eriku Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 (edited) Oh no, not necessarily real world events that would warrant the old "This story is based on actual events...certain incidents, characters and timelines have been changed.." disclaimer, per se. I guess the disturbing aspect for me is that there is probably far too great a number of intellectually stunted people out there, who'll see stuff like this and think the Civil War was fought with things like the dynamite crossbows, or tank-turreted wagons, or cast-iron steam-powered jet-packs... I wouldn't worry about it. If there are people that stupid out there (and there are, I once worked with a girl who recently graduated high school and had no idea what Nazis, Hitler and the Holocaust was) natural selection will weed them out eventually. Dude, Nicholas D. Wolfood's turd wouldn't go see this movie! Don't get me wrong, I wasn't comparing quality of the two ~ just themes (crazy exaggerated weapons, etc). While I'm not expecting Jonah Hex to be an abomination, I have no expectations of it being anywhere near as good as Trigun. Edited June 8, 2010 by eriku Quote
Squird5 Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 It's no different than something like the anime Trigun, and I don't recall anyone mistaking that for reality. You mean... Trigun isn't real? NOOOO!!! And how many people had even heard of Jonah Hex before this? (Or had forgotten and didn't know who he was when first seeing the trailer) Quote
eriku Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 I hadn't heard of him prior to this film, but then I've never paid much attention to DC characters outside of Batman. Quote
Penguin Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 (edited) You mean... Trigun isn't real? NOOOO!!! And how many people had even heard of Jonah Hex before this? (Or had forgotten and didn't know who he was when first seeing the trailer) It's certainly an B- or C-rank character to base a movie on. Long-time DC readers are likely to recognize the character, but no one else. Typical studio approach though. They seem to equate "comic book = hit movie" instead of "good quality + comic people actually read = hit movie". Strikes me as the same thought processes that brought us "Elektra". Edited June 8, 2010 by Penguin Quote
reddsun1 Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 (edited) I wouldn't worry about it. If there are people that stupid out there (and there are, I once worked with a girl who recently graduated high school and had no idea what Nazis, Hitler and the Holocaust was) natural selection will weed them out eventually. Alas, if only I could take comfort in that. But the cynic in me just thinks: perhaps the greatest achievement (unfortunately for us) of modern Western civilization has been to largely upset, if not completely thwart the process of natural selection.... far too many of the open mouth breathers manage to survive to adulthood, blighting the rest of the world with their offspring, maybe even succeed enough to get their own reality TV show. Edited June 8, 2010 by reddsun1 Quote
terry the lone wolf Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 (edited) I dig Jonah Hex; I've read a few of the old westerns comics back in the days and they had solid story telling. It's too bad they didn't retain Jonah's "Two-Face" look especially that wicked enlarged right eye. As for the western movies, I'm mostly into the spaghetti westerns that were all filmed in Spain like the Sergio Leone films (Man with No Name Trilogy, Once Upon A Time in the West, & A Fistful of Dynamite) and Sergio Corbucci movies (Django & Navajo Joe). Edited June 8, 2010 by terry the lone wolf Quote
Wanzerfan Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 Man, the D.C. Comics homepage sucks. All I got from the site were a list of the recent comics. I tried getting his bio and and came up with dick. Quote
areaseven Posted June 17, 2010 Author Posted June 17, 2010 Man, the D.C. Comics homepage sucks. All I got from the site were a list of the recent comics. I tried getting his bio and and came up with dick. So why are you mad if that's what you got? Quote
anime52k8 Posted June 17, 2010 Posted June 17, 2010 (edited) I guess the disturbing aspect for me is that there is probably far too great a number of intellectually stunted people out there, who'll see stuff like this and think the Civil War was fought with things like the dynamite crossbows, or tank-turreted wagons, or cast-iron steam-powered jet-packs... the fact that people are retarded enough to not no the difference between over the top fantasy-action movies and historical fact is in no way the fault of the movie or the people who make them. Hollywood is not school . personally I blame poor breading. Edited June 17, 2010 by anime52k8 Quote
Wanzerfan Posted June 17, 2010 Posted June 17, 2010 (edited) So why are you mad if that's what you got? I'm not mad, just a little annoyed.The phrase "came up with dick" is a semi-vulgar way of saying that I got bubkis, nada, or nothing in my search. Edited June 18, 2010 by Wanzerfan Quote
derex3592 Posted June 17, 2010 Posted June 17, 2010 ZERO interest in this. Good westerns are few and far between....Unforgiven, Tombstone, and 3:10 to Yuma are the best modern 3 I can think of. Quote
Ghost Train Posted June 17, 2010 Posted June 17, 2010 If I learned anything from US History Civil War videos is that the conflict was primarily 99% writing long a$$ letters to your wife/girlfriend/uncle/grandpa/dad/mom in the hopes that in the 20th century they would be read by some guy faking a Southern accent but seen by millions of people on the yet to be invented "tele-tube" ... that and Project SuperNova 19th century edition with the USS Monitor vs the CSS Merrimack. Quote
spacemanoeuvres Posted June 17, 2010 Posted June 17, 2010 will not see because of annoying girl with five head and toe thumbs j/k I wasn't that interested to begin with hehehe Quote
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