Marvel Movie Madness! Part 4: Fantastic Four (1994)

This early attempt is no stretch of the imagination.

Enter Marvel Movie Madness, wherein Rotten Tomatoes watches all of the significant Marvel movies ever made. Full Marvel Movie Madness list here. Tune in! We give you our thoughts, and you give us yours.


Part 4: The Fantastic Four (1994)
Directed by Oley Sassone, starring Alex Hyde-White, Rebecca Staab, Carl Ciarfalio, Jay Underwood

Matt: Imagine hiring a director and cast to make a movie that you never intended to release. That's exactly what happened in 1994, when Constantin Film partnered with Roger Corman to make this low-budget version of The Fantastic Four. The film was made only so that Constantin could maintain the film rights to the franchise.

There's no getting around it - this movie is pretty bad, as expected from something that was never meant to see the light of day. And the standard Roger Corman elements are there - stock footage, cheap effects, etc (one of my favorites was the use of asbestos fire suits to stand in for space suits). But to be honest, it's no worse than you'd expect out of something shown on TV in 1994.

The kicker here is that no one told the cast and crew the movie wasn't intended to be released; they all thought the movie was legit at the time. The fact that the director and cast thought they were making a real movie makes this weirdly fascinating to watch. The actors are clearly trying here (sometimes too much), and the movie does have a sort of hokey charm.

In some places, the movie actually does compare to the 20th Century Fox productions. I think this Dr. Doom is more true to what we'd expect from the comics, and The Thing from the later, big budget films doesn't really look that much better than he does here, although this Thing looks a little reptilian.

Alex: I've been falling asleep to this movie over the past week. I'm at the part where one of the villains -- the one that looks like The Penguin's disfigured cousin -- kidnaps a blind pottery artist to make her his bride. I'm assuming Dr. Doom fits into this, perhaps as one of the groomsmen? Is he planning the bachelor party? I'm sure it'll make sense when I get to the end.


Tim:: My cousin, who's a huge Marvel geek, was talking about this movie around the time it was made, so I've long wondered what a zero-budget Fantastic Four movie would look like. Thanks to the miracle of YouTube, I have an answer -- and though this movie is far from being good, it's not the unwatchable mess I had anticipated. I agree with everything Matt said; it's kind of poignant watching the faux Four (and the filmmakers) invest such energy into a movie that would never (officially) see the light of day. The Fantastic Four is overacted (sometimes laughably so), the sets and special effects are straight from the dime store, and it's got a goofy, gee-whiz vibe that's laughably out of fashion in our era of dark, gritty comic book adaptations. But it's occasionally a lot weirder than it has to be (the Jeweler, surrounded by legions of subterranean hobos, wouldn't seem out of place in a Terry Gilliam movie). And I have to admit, the scene in which the Four's craft is hit by a cosmic ray was nicely done -- the slow-mo shots of our heroes blinded by a powerful blast of light was both inspired and evocative. All in all, it's a thoroughly so-so movie, but not a disaster by any means.

Jeff: Purity of intent can go a long way, can't it? Maybe I've just been beaten down by crassly cynical Hollywood product, but I think there's something sort of endearing about a movie this cheerfully crappy. Fantastic Four is bad, but it's bad in a Little Rascals-type "Let's get the gang together and make a movie!" way. It reminds me a little of the Sunday night movies that Disney used to make for network TV, with bare-minimum production values, slumming character actors (I hope they gave you at least enough for a mortgage payment, George Gaynes), and performances that swing wildly from curiously deadpan to way over the top -- sometimes during the same line.


A couple of asides: If someone ever writes a book about the making of this movie, I'm buying it. And during the opening credits, while the Muzak score played over a tour of the galaxy, I briefly daydreamed that I was watching an episode of Newhart in Space.

Matt: Jeff, I think you should do the investigating and write that book - there have to be some great stories there. I'd love for this to get a DVD or Blu-ray release, because I'd be interested in seeing a decent transfer. We all watched this on YouTube, and I think that watching a 240p feed from what has to be at least a 3rd generation VHS copy only adds to the experience. And if it ever makes it to DVD, Jeff gets the pull quote on the box: "Cheerfully crappy!"

Tim:: All joking aside, you guys raise an interesting point: it's unlikely that we'll ever see a curiosity like it again, since no Marvel property is getting the B-movie treatment in the near future. That's not necessarily a bad thing; in the last couple years we've seen some remarkably mature, stylistically bold comic book movies. But that also means we'll be denied perversely watchable oddities like this.

Alex: Made it to the end. Nope, no sense at all. Put this one back in the ashcan.

More Marvel Movie Madness:

Comments

Wisenheimer

Joshua Dinsmore

Lol I had no idea they made this movie.

May 16 - 03:19 PM

Mr. Lee

Daniel Lee

neither did I....

May 16 - 03:58 PM

The.Watcher

The Watcher

lol I tried watching this one night a few years ago, but the quality of both the movie and the transfer was so terrible that I couldn't get past the 10 minute mark.

May 16 - 04:21 PM

Wisenheimer

Joshua Dinsmore

Ha, then I wont bother putting my self in mortal danger by watching it. Thanks for the heads up. :)

May 17 - 01:00 AM

Matanuki

Matanuki .

Now THIS... is entertainment! lol

May 17 - 09:18 PM

Isaac

Isaac H

I've always been curious about this movie, and now that I know it's on YouTube I might give it a go if I get a chance.

May 16 - 04:00 PM

Pietro Maximoff

Pietro Maximoff

I watched it on youtube a few months ago. I had been watching a bunch of old TV marvel movies like "Generation X" and the Japanese anime of the marvel version of Dracula. Compared to those it was pretty good.

May 29 - 09:00 PM

Andrew M.

Andrew McGregor

It was truly atrocious.

May 16 - 04:03 PM

Sir_Ffej

Jeffrey Andres

I saw this movie YEARS ago on a bootleg copy. It was hilariously terrible and complete nonsense. That being said, it's totally worth watching. I love that George Gaynes (Police Academy's Commandant Lassard) is easily the most famous person in the movie and makes the opening credits even though he only appears for like a minute in the whole thing. Awesome addition to your countdown. Hillarious!

May 16 - 04:21 PM

ap sirius

karl anderson

looks like Toxic Avanger in tights...

May 16 - 04:27 PM

Lumbergh Phucter

Jamie Eakins

Toxie actually did wear tights... and a tutu.

May 17 - 04:48 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

Why does "The Thing" look like the spawn of the creature from the black lagoon?

May 16 - 04:54 PM

Simply Cinema

Anders Gatten

I really want to watch it now. I love this kind of thing. :)

May 16 - 04:55 PM

Scott Love

Luke Simpson

I've never seen this one, but I think I might enjoy it more than the last two "legit" ones put together. ohSLAM

May 16 - 04:55 PM

Scott Love

Luke Simpson

Actually, scratch that. I barely made it through the trailer.

May 16 - 04:58 PM

Gordon Franklin Terry Sr

Gordon Terry

An analogy Pete Jackson's Meet the Feebles next to The Muppets . . . is this Fantastic 4 compared to the recent Fantastic 4 movies.

JUSTICE LEAGUE

I wonder if we'll ever get to see a SUPER FRIENDS ((1973 - 1986) movie????

(the trouble here is no one commenting on these forums was alive that long before 1986 and therefore has never seen Super Friends on TV. Bummer.)

SUPER FRIENDS
Super Friends was an American animated television series about a team of superheroes, which ran from 1973 to 1986 on ABC as part of its Saturday morning cartoon lineup. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera and was based on the Justice League of America (JLA) and associated comic book characters published by DC Comics.

The name of the program, and the JLA members featured with the Super Friends, have been variously represented (such as Super Friends and Challenge of the Super Friends for example) at different points in its broadcast history. There were a total of 109 episodes, along with two back door pilot episodes of The New Scooby-Doo Movies, with Batman and Robin appearing in "The Dynamic Scooby Doo Affair" and "The Caped Crusader Caper."


Writing

Plotlines for the first incarnation of the Super Friends did not involve any of the familiar DC Comics supervillains. Rather, they focused on the often far-fetched schemes of various mad scientists and aliens, who were revealed at some point in the program to be well-intentioned but pursuing their goals through an unlawful or disreputable means. Typically, at the end, all that is needed is a peaceful and reasonable discussion to convince the antagonists to adopt more reasonable methods.[7]

The All-New Super Friends Hour departed somewhat from the previous series' formula by using villains that used much more violent methods to further their goals and typically could not be reasoned with, requiring the heroes to use force to stop them. Beginning with Challenge of the Super Friends, several of the heroes' arch-villains from the comic books, such as Lex Luthor and The Riddler, began to feature prominently in comic-style stories. Throughout the series, plots often wrapped themselves up neatly in the final minutes of an episode in typical deus ex machina fashion.
[edit] Production history

When animation company Hanna-Barbera licensed the animation rights to the DC Comics characters and adapted the Justice League of America comic book for television, it made several changes in the transition, not the least of which was the change of name to Super Friends. Nevertheless, team members sometimes referred to themselves as the Justice League on the show. The violence common in superhero comics was toned down for a younger audience, as well as to fit with the restrictive broadcast standards regarding violence in 1970s children?s television.

Although like most H-B shows, the rights to the Super Friends franchise are owned by Warner Bros., because WB owned DC Comics, the shows have always been under WB control. As a result, Cartoon Network was not able to air the shows until after the merger of Time Warner and Turner Broadcasting System was complete.
[edit] 1973?1974 series
Main article: Super Friends (1973 TV series)

Super Friends first aired on ABC on September 8, 1973,[8] featuring well known DC characters Superman, Batman and Robin, Wonder Woman, and Aquaman. Superman, Batman & Robin and Aquaman had each previously appeared in their own animated series produced by Filmation, and voice talent from these prior programs was brought over to work on the new show. Shortly before the Super Friends series was developed, Superman and Wonder Woman also guest-starred in two episodes of The Brady Kids, while Batman and Robin appeared in two episodes of The New Scooby-Doo Movies.

In addition to the superheroes, a trio of sidekicks was introduced, each of whom were new characters not drawn from the comic books: Wendy (voiced by Sherri Alberoni), Marvin White (voiced by Frank Welker), and Wonderdog (also voiced by Frank Welker), none of whom had any special abilities (save the dog's unexplained ability to reason and "talk.") Inspired by the Scooby-Doo gang, the trio?or at least its human members?were depicted as detectives and/or superheroes in training.

Each episode would begin with the heroes responding to an emergency detected by the massive TroubAlert computer that was situated within the Hall of Justice which served as the headquarters of the team. Colonel Wilcox, a U.S. Army official, was a recurring character who would work as a government liaison to the Super Friends during emergencies.

Conflicts are often ultimately resolved with the antagonists persuaded to adapt more reasonable methods to achieve their aims with the assistance of the heroes. Natural disasters triggered by human (or alien) activity were often shown, and environmental themes featured strongly in the program.

Three other DC Comics superheroes were featured as guest stars during this season: the Flash, Plastic Man, and Green

May 16 - 05:07 PM

Odd E.

Odd Even

Born in 1988 and used to watch superfriends on TNT when they used to show cartoons from 3am to 6am. Don't count the youth out ya DOUCHE!!!!

May 17 - 05:33 PM

Jake D.

Jake Doss

Dude I remember the super friends and I'm twenty years old they reshowed it on cartoon network when I was younger and I watched it all the time.

May 18 - 11:08 AM

Jake D.

Jake Doss

Highly interested in seeing this supposed "piece o shit".

May 18 - 11:09 AM

noc

D V

My friend told me this movie is currently available for download in vhs quality at a popular bittorrent tracker whose name starts with a "d".

May 16 - 05:44 PM

Wisenheimer

Joshua Dinsmore

Lolwut?

May 17 - 01:01 AM

The.Watcher

The Watcher

Demonoid.

May 17 - 01:12 PM

peter h.

peter holland

This obscure Roger Corman dud is on YouTube? Why doesnâ??t that surprise me after seeing obscure horrors like the non-MST3K version of MANOS THE HANDS OF FATE, SANTA AND THE ICE CREAM BUNNY and WOODCHIPPER MASSACRE, all I can say is the internet is a godsend for obscure movie nuts (like me). Why do I get the idea I will be viewing this trash very shortly?

May 16 - 05:47 PM

General Wiz

Carlos Flores

I honestly have never seen the full movie. However, from what I've seen, it looks like one of those so bad it's good movies. But wouldn't it had been such a feel good story if the film had turned out great? It would had been like they never had intended to release it, but when they saw it they thought it was so good they had to release it to the public, and it ended being a huge hit. If that had been what happened I swear there would already be a inspirational drama movie about it.

May 16 - 05:54 PM

John Matrix

John Matrix

A classic! I can proudly say I'm one of the few people who've sat through this film. Yes, it sucks, but in a charming way. Much more entertaining than the bland, generic one's made a few years ago. They better watch the 1990's Captain America, as well.

May 16 - 06:14 PM

woundedmakers

Steven Bada

haha couldn't agree more! If you like B movies with extra cheese, there's NO reason to skip this. Also, it's hardly ever mentioned just how faithful this film is to the comics (of course being faithful to the source material doesn't necessarily equate to quality). Considering that this film was never intended to be released, it's strange that the filmmakers bothered to adapt the source material so closely. They could've easily done anything with these characters (ala ITALIAN Red Skull ;P ), and it wouldn't have mattered. While this film is anything but "good", it definitely has double the entertainment value of 2005's bland Fantastic 4 film.

May 16 - 08:30 PM

woundedmakers

Steven Bada

Oh, and for anyone interested-there is a very decent quality copy available on a few torrent sites (google!). The fact that the RT guys watched this on youtube, without even ATTEMPTING to find a better copy elsewhere, tells me they might not know Jack from Shit. (if you don't know what a torrent is, you should probably get back to the giant rock you live under.)

May 16 - 08:40 PM

max_jaybo

Jason DeMars

To hell with a book about it, guys, they should make an "Ed Wood"-style movie about the making of this movie.

May 16 - 06:27 PM

Alexson Philip

Alexson Philipiah

meh

May 16 - 10:08 PM

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