Bryan Singer: Retcon-Artist

Bryan Singer: Retcon-Artist

His return to the X-Men franchise seemed like a gift from the comic book movie gods, but are we putting our faith and hopes in a false prophet?

Editorial Opinion
By CapnSquintyEyes - Aug 21, 2010 12:08 PM EST
Filed Under: X-Men: First Class

If you're like me, you love the X-Men. If you're even more like me, you only hope for the best when it comes to all things X-Men. If you're uncannily similar to me in ways that are kind of creepy, you've tried being optimistic about "X-Men: First Class." Yet the recent divulging of details is just too much wrong to overlook.

Before you read on, let me make an assumptions -- "Superman Returns" was not the movie you hoped it would be. It let you down in so many ways it makes your deadbeat dad look downright nurturing. Agreed? If so, it should make it easier to stomach this next part.

Bryan Singer is no longer good for the X-Men franchise. That isn't a question, it's a fact. To reach this conclusion, you don't have to look any further than his recent super heroic exploits with the S-man.


S-man meaning Spacey Man.


When Bryan set out to make "Superman Returns," he had a very clear idea of the direction he wanted to go -- he was going to ignore the horrendous Superman III and VI, and use Superman II (or more accurately, the Richard Donner version) as a jumping off point. In doing so, to not only improve Superman's celluloid record, but rewrite it all together. For those of you not in the know, this is what's called a retcon (or retroactive continuity). Going back and changing history. Theoretically, this was a fantastic idea. Erasing the memory of bad sequels with a shiny new storyline that has all the benefits of 20/20 hindsight and the blessing of the original director? It's too good to be true!

And yet.... it wasn't.

"Superman Returns" was bland. It was boring. It was unimaginative. Early log lines promised distant worlds across the solar system, but Supes never left the outer atmosphere. Bryan had a chance to set the franchise on fire, but instead he burned it to the ground.


And Marlon Brando's resurrected, disembodied head with it.


Four years later, Bryan makes a triumphant return to the X-Men franchise. With an article in the L.A. Times detailing how he's not only going to direct "X-Men: First Class" (a long rumored and shelved project), but he intends to do X-Men 4 and Wolverine 2 as well, should he be allowed. Fanboys everywhere rejoice at the prospect of the man who crafted the mutants' original cinematic exploits triumphantly resurrecting the franchise and returning it to its former glory. But like a nation that forgets its history, we're finding ourselves doomed.

Prodigal Bryan's return started with a script from Jamie Moss. No one can say exactly how many permutations its gone through since its inception, but we can say for sure (according to breaking news) that he seems satisfied with it. And from just a few, seemingly insignificant details, we can already tell exactly where it's headed. It's not a prequel. It's not a (*shudder*) reboot.

It's a retcon.

Professor X will not be confined to a wheelchair, but we will find out how. Neither Scott Summers nor Jean Grey will be in the film. The combination of these two facts alone is in direct contradiction with scenes from 'X3' and 'Wolverine,' in which dear Charles first met Jean and Scott on the strength of his own two feet. Retcon.

Emma Frost will be portrayed by January Jones (near-perfect casting, in my opinion), despite her apparent role as Kayla Silverfox's much, much younger sister in Wolverine. How can a girl first meeting Professor Xavier during a prison break be a woman with a role in his past? Retcon.

And finally, the story will take place in the 1960's with Charles and Erik in their early 20's, if for no other reason than to allow their story to play out against the backdrop of the MLK-Malcom X dichotomy (subtle enough for you?). How can the young mutants be teenagers in the 1960's without being ancient in the present day of the X-trilogy? I don't think I have to say it.



If this all seems familiar, it's because it is. Bryan Singer wants to bring the X-Men back, but he wants to do it his way: blatantly disregarding any kind of history X3 and Wolverine established. Do we all wish we could just forget those two movies ever happened? Of course we do. But we can't, because they did, and it isn't Bryan's place to force it on us. And if I can refer to "Superman Returns" one more time, doing so can make an even bigger mess of things. Selective memory is a bad thing in real life, that applies to movies, too. It's baffling to new and old audience members alike. What are we supposed to remember? What are we supposed to forget?

I'll be honest, I abhor the recent trend of reboots. If the original isn't being improved upon using vastly superior technology as a story-telling aid, a reboot is just a disgusting money-grab on the studio's part. The Spider-Man reboot is Sony doing their best to keep milking that cash cow. They're not going to tell a better story, they're going to tell a slightly different one in an attempt to keep the franchise viable sans Sam Raimi and co. And while there's no mistaking that 'First Class' is a financial venture first and foremost, there was hope it would be a reboot for a reason.


Pictured: One of many reasons


The first X-Men film was released in 2000. Two years before Spider-Man and a full five years before Christopher Nolan's Batman reboot. The path for superhero franchises that could be taken seriously was largely unpaved, and X-Men was forged with a tentative hand, making a lot of concessions due to necessity. Ten years later, we live in a very different time where Tony Stark is a household name and the Joker wins an Oscar. Advances in technology might not have changed outside of efficiency, but the climate for an all-out X-Men reboot (without Wolverine's marketability) is pitch perfect. If there's ever been an opportune moment to educate the masses on the actual, epic love story of Scott Summers and Jean Grey, it's now. Yet we're getting nothing of the like. And who's standing in our way?

Bryan Singer and his attachment to his first films.

Don't get me wrong -- I like him. I like his movies. But he's not doing anyone any good (especially Matthew Vaughn) by handpicking the story to this pseudo-prequel according to what he wants the big picture to look like.

Of course, he's only one of the culprits responsible for "First Class" inevitable disappointment. But that's another talk for another day.

X-MEN: FIRST CLASS Was Partially Written In Claudia Schiffer's Hospital Room Due To Rushed Production
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X-MEN: FIRST CLASS Was Partially Written In Claudia Schiffer's Hospital Room Due To Rushed Production

Matthew Vaughn Reveals Scrapped Plans For X-MEN: FIRST CLASS Trilogy And Who He Was Going To Cast As Wolverine
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LEEE777
LEEE777 - 8/21/2010, 1:56 PM
Dude @ Ya right, STINGER or is it STINKER? (lol) and FOX are [frick]ing it all up!!!...



: P
NERO
NERO - 8/21/2010, 2:17 PM
Well said. I disagree about the Spider-Man reboot; however, I feel it was necessitated more by a mishandled franchise and tired lank story telling by Raimi and the needless slaughter of most of the rogues gallery than Sony's need for cash.

X-Men I believe simply needs to end. That includes all origins films and Deadpool. Just stop. It is bad enough as it is, why muddy the waters further with nonsensical retcons, prequels, alternate timelines, and et al.

A major problem I feel is the fact that Singer seems to be a one trick pony. Yes, Bryan. We know you are a homosexual. Yes we know people are not always accepting of you and you lifestyle. But there are other angles that one can approach the persecution of the mutants that that one particular allegory. How about Genosha? How about genocide? The X-Men and Brotherhood battling a technologically advanced apartheidist nation on the verge of tripping to the madness of Nazi German circa 1938 that would be epic. At least we would see some great action along with the message.

I suppose with this new film he has set his sights on playing up the MLK/Malcolm X analogy between Xavier and Magneto, but no offense that difference was so obvious it really doesn't need its own film to address it. Does it?
I just see in Singers hands a lack of imagination and scale. Setting a film in the 1960's doesn't take a great deal of imagination and having seen Singers work in a period piece before with Valkyrie and again he took what could have been an exciting drama and lost the excitement in the details of the period. I fear this will happen here as well, detail over substance.
KeithM
KeithM - 8/21/2010, 4:37 PM
Ozy: You never ever heard something and thought "I don't like the sound of that"?

If you like the sound of every single thing you ever hear about, then good for you, but some of us like to voice our displeasure (for whatever reasons) when what we hear sounds like a load of shit.

And this sounds like a load of shit.

The guy doesn't know anything about the characters or their world, or care. Singer's story already has plot holes you could drive a truck through AND they've had to throw 12 pages of the script away because Singer had plagiarised Inception AND Alive Eve negotiated her way out of her contract because of problems she had with the script. These are not good signs.

I also don't like the direction in which they're going, I don't like the characters they're using or how they're using them.

The knowledge that they're only making the movie and using the particular mutants they are so that they can retain the rights rather than any 'artistic' or story reason can't be ignored either.

All the signs are that this is going to be a complete mess. You can stick your head in the sand and sing "la la la" if you want, but don't try to stop the rest of us voicing our concern and displeasure, because we ain't gonna.


[frick] Fox. [frick] Singer. [frick] X Men: First Class.

CapnSquintyEyes
CapnSquintyEyes - 8/23/2010, 11:18 AM
@Ozy You don't always have to see a duck to know there's one around. Just listen for the quacking.

How do you stop a bad sequel? By aborting the movie that came before it. Don't support this horribly rushed style of film-making or how the franchise is being decimated to turn a quick buck.
panathatube
panathatube - 8/24/2010, 5:32 AM
Singer's Superman was good. But because it was only good it was not good enough. I liked Routh and Spacey but i hated this superchild idea, and i also thing that the actress that was playing Lois Lane was nothing special.The entire movie had no memorable action scenes despite the huge budget, and it felt more than a remake of Donners' films than a retcon.
adamcawa
adamcawa - 8/24/2010, 8:42 AM
lump me into the uncannily similar in ways that are kind of creepy group

but unlike you captainsquintyeyes, I haven't totally lost faith, mostly because, like an abuse victims erases their violent and repugnant past, I too can erase the abominations that were X3 and Wolverine from my past

@panathatube - Singer's Superman was like watching the class loser stand up and recite a mind-numbingly uncomfortable love poem to the most popular girl in school. It was like that scene in Not Another Teen Movie where the dork gets up and recites his poem to Janie, only worse because she wasn't the most popular girl in school. In fact, she had glasses, and a pony-tail, and don't forget the overalls.

Ahhh, Chris Evans. What can't he do?
adamcawa
adamcawa - 8/24/2010, 8:45 AM
Although, I can't understand why they would decide to keep the rights to mutants NO ONE cares about. Banshee and Havoc, I can see, but Darwin, Angel Salvadore and Azazel? REALLY?
CapnSquintyEyes
CapnSquintyEyes - 8/24/2010, 10:59 AM
@panathatube - It didn't change the history laid out in I and II, no, but it did III and IV. That, to me, is a retcon. History being changed.

@adamcawa - Kudos to you for keeping the faith, sir. For my part, fool me once, shame on you X3. Fool me twice, shame on me Wolverine. Fool me thrice First Class? Not a chance.
JayTopStix
JayTopStix - 8/24/2010, 1:27 PM
False prophet. He destroyed Superman.
TheDarqueOne
TheDarqueOne - 8/24/2010, 3:14 PM
I will be thrilled when Singer is finally done making any sort of CBM. All he really needs is one more big Fail and it will be over. This Movies sounds like it might do the trick. So personally I am rather pleased about that. The faster Fox makes bad movies the quicker they will let go of the Rights.

X1 & X2 did indeed do most of the jump starting of the current run of CBMs but the way they did this was bound to cause problems in the long run. They are both great Movies in the traditional sense but in my opinion they are terrible CBMs. The Spider-Man series is considerably better.

Traditional Comics from the Golden Age until now have all had one thing in common: The Big Honking Fight! Every story is just building up to that and it is the very point of the existence of the SuperHeros.

'The Fantastic Four explore, the Avengers avenge... but we all fight' Tony Stark to the body of Captain America.

Singer took what he liked from the X-Men and made a couple of decent movies. He had never made a CBM and I doubt he ever will. And I suppose I might as well say this now to get it out of the way...

I have said what I think of X1 and X2. I certainly like them and appreciate the effect they had. Without them we might not have the real CBMs of today. But frankly X3 is the second best CBM of all time right behind Spider-Man III. Did anybody except Wolverine get a good fight in X2?

Yes they are both deeply flawed in the traditional sense. X3 has two moments that to this day still make me curse Ratner's name every time I see them (Scott's death and Magneto's abandonment of Mystique). But at least they are proper CBMs full of speed and fury ending in one big battle. Iron Man II is a contender I suppose but that is the newer generation.

Singer sounds like he is well on his way to another Epic Fail and to me that is a very good thing if you love proper CBMs.
adamcawa
adamcawa - 8/24/2010, 3:32 PM
"But frankly X3 is the second best CBM of all time right behind Spider-Man III."

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Thanks man, I needed that laugh today.
commanderhulk
commanderhulk - 8/24/2010, 4:17 PM
I really like Bryan Singer as a filmmaker. X-Men and X2 are still great films and stand out among other superhero films. Grounded in reality and set the tone for Batman Begins, Spider-Man, and other serious comicbook movies. Singer has made some great movies from Usual Suspect, Apt Pupil, X-Men, X2, Superman Returns, and Valkyrie.

I personally loved Superman Returns, and find it one of the most underrated movies. It is a quite approach that pays homage to the original while doing something new and diffrent with the character. The world feels like a Superman world and the characters were right on, and the dialog seemed very good, quite little moments between characters, and not just random action.

I am excitted for X-Men First Class. I am happy to see Singer returning to the film series he created and can't wait to see what him and Mathew Vaughn bring to the film. I like the choice of mutants. He has chosen diffrent mutants that will come together to tell the best overall story, which is what he did with the first two.

I didn't expect a litterally translation, and didn't want the first five. I want to see the X-Men Movies First Class, which is what I'm getting. I get to see the origin of the movie team and see how they came together. Darwin, Tempest, Banshee, Havok, and Beast are visually interesting mutant and can't wait to see how they all work together. Like the setting and will be a good origin story with interesting characters. So I like what I see so far.

I'm excitted, and that's my opinion. We all have a right to our own.
DarkSuperman
DarkSuperman - 8/24/2010, 7:30 PM
Bryan Singer makes my soul Cry.

I was never blown away by any of his comic films. They were entertaining for their duration, but i mostly just felt sad that he blatantly tramples over established lore and source material in order to make room for his vision, which he deems "better" than stories that are beloved by millions and have endured for decades. He bends and warps our dreams like some effed up version of Mxyzptlk.

what makes it even worse is that he freely admits this is tons of interviews with states like "How I saw it is..." and "What I want to do..." or my personal fav "Superman is really about what happens when an old boyfriend returns..." to quote his imbecilic Lex "WRONG!"

These "Film makers" need to open their eyes to one very simple fact, They don't own these characters. We do. Maybe not legally, but in every other way that counts. No comic book movies would matter if us the fans didn't spend our hard earned money for decades making them the pop culture phenomenon they are today.

Fox and Singer need to get wise to the fact that they are merely "stewards", A person who manages the property or affairs for another, namely us the fans! Their REAL JOBS are to safe guards the characters we love and their world and represent them honestly and in the way they are truly deserving and more importantly EXPECTED to be by the fans and people who love them.

Sometimes things get lost in translation from page to screen. We get that. However I don't think its too hard to get the basics right, basics very well known to everybody. We just want the X-Men to be shown the same respect as IRON MAN, THOR, and CAPTAIN AMERICA, and even SPIDER-MAN.

However it has become painfully obvious that this will not happen under the stewardship of Fox and Singer.
TheDarqueOne
TheDarqueOne - 8/25/2010, 6:03 AM
@adamcawa Considering how I have seen people get blasted around here for daring to state a unique opinion your reaction was almost pleasant.

adamcawa
adamcawa - 8/25/2010, 10:12 AM
@TheDarqueOne well posting an opinion on here, it's assumed that you understand people are going to post their opinion as to why yours is wrong, or in fewer cases, right

But I was just so shocked at reading that, you're literally the only person I've ever seen post that, that I had to realize that some people just see thing different ways and it's not like disagreeing with them is going to change their opinion, so we may as well just remember to get along and keep it civil. After all, we all do have something in common in that we like comic book movies, or we wouldn't even be here posting in the first place.
TheDarqueOne
TheDarqueOne - 8/25/2010, 2:55 PM
@adamcawa I am always up for a friendly debate about almost anything. I long ago accepted that my opinions on many things are not of the norm. Does not mean they are wrong just I see things a bit differently than most.

I also know more about how Movies are made than the average person because of my life-long interest. The rules about what make a 'Good Movie' and those that, for me, cover a 'Good Comic Book Movie' are fundamentally at odds. Far down the road maybe I will get to see the sort of movie I really want but I am not excatly holding my breath.

X1 & X2 are very good Movies but as far as presenting the X-Men they just never did that. Singer took some names and the basics and started a new Story. His Story sucks but it hit all the right buttons so to this day people still heap praise on it. But at this very moment on my somewhat large TV X3 is playing.

Remember this...

"Yeah. We're outnumbered. I'm not going to lie to ya. But we lost Scott. We lost the Professor. And if we don't fight now everything they stood for will die with them. I'm not going to let that happen. Are you?"

Head shake with grim determination showing.

"Then we stand together. X-Men. All of us."

That was the moment the X-Men first appeared on film. It was not the X-Men I wanted. If there was even a teeny bit of justice in Hollywood that would have been Scott's moment. But it was Iceman, Beast, Storm, Colossus & Shadowcat listening to Wolvernine try to fill Scott's shoes.

It was the X-Men. Finally.

So I don't much care what anybody thinks of X3 as a whole. Critics, the mass Audience, and even other Fans. X3 has the X-Men finally together as a real Team and for that I love it to death.

I will also light a candle in a window for the day the right to the Mutants return to Marvel and they can do them up right.
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