• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

Wanted


log in or register to remove this ad


A buddy of mine loaned me the comic mini-series of this about eighteen months ago. It was quite good, and I liked it - the trailer for the movie, however, made me cringe.

The rundown for those who don't know (and haven't Wikipedia'd it), is that upon being informed that his father (whom he never knew) has died, Wesley is inducted into the Fraternity; the shadowy cabal of supervillains who control the world.

In this world, the supervillains won, successfully defeating superheroes and using a reality-retconning device to make it so all of the world's superheroes never came to be (e.g. the guy who would've been Batman never took up the cape, etc). However, since there are other universes out there, the Fraternity still controls the world in secret, lest superheroes from other universes notice and ruin things for them.

That aside, they rule the world and can do whatever they want. And as the son of a deceased member, Wesley is invited to join their little group. Fox, the woman who brings him in (Angelina in the movie) trains him to be the sort of person who'll appreciate being a member of the Fraternity that is, to not only have peak physical skills (his "super power" is the same as his father's: he's REALLY good at killing people), but to also be completely and utterly amoral; a significant focus is that he have no qualms about killing, raping, or doing anything else as he pleases.

The conflict for Wesley is that no one knows who killed his father (the world's premier assassin), which leads to how even the Fraternity has factions; not all of the supervillains are content with not being able to rule and act openly. I won't give any spoilers, save to say that it ends in a showdown, and the truth about his father's death finally comes out.

The movie, if the trailer is any indication, gets rid of the grittiness that made the comic so appealing (the profanity, violence, depravity, and amusingly-distasteful supervillains such as $#!&head (they weren't censored in the comics)), are gone. Instead, the Fraternity seems to have been retooled as some sort of "we keep the Balance" organization, and Wesley's training seems like it's more of a journey to become a tough guy, whereas the comics presented a wish-fulfillment scenario whose bare honesty was slightly horrific - it showcased what a lot of us would likely become is given incredible physical aptitude and removed all fear of punishment and respect for others.

Ultimately, this seems like it's going to be another comic book-turned-movie, which isn't something I Wanted to see. :p
 

Alzrius said:
Ultimately, this seems like it's going to be another comic book-turned-movie, which isn't something I Wanted to see. :p

Well, if it were the comic-book-turned-movie, I'd love to see that. With the exception of Morgan Freeman's 'magic bullet' trick (and I'll be surprised if that very phrase isn't used, and links one of the Fraternity to the Kennedy assassination), there's no super powers, no costumes, no nothing like the comic. Looks like they took the most basic idea and title and made their own action movie with no real nod to the comic.
 

I should have put quotes around "comic book-turned-movie" because that's what I was trying to imply; that movies based on comics almost always screw up the premise, and end up being both bad and very unfaithful to their source material.
 


Alzrius said:
I should have put quotes around "comic book-turned-movie" because that's what I was trying to imply; that movies based on comics almost always screw up the premise, and end up being both bad and very unfaithful to their source material.

There are some exceptions (Hellboy comes to mind) and a few "one out of two ain't bad" (Hellblazer was ok on its own terms, though it did not resemble the comic book version).
 

What I can't figure out is why they didn't have Halle Berry play Fox. I mean, in the comic the character *is* Halle Berry... Not that I mind looking at Jolie... but Berry would have been a better fit...
 

Wesley looked a hell a lot like Eminem also.



I wondering how this was going to go. If rated by movie standards, the comic would be a NR-17 or a hard R. It sounds like it is being dummied down to a PG-13. Kinda sucks.
 

The comic book could not be made into a commercially viable movie. NC-17 is a death sentence to distribution. The concepts and themes in the comic are not for mass consumption. Drastic changes to the story would have to be made to make it profitable.

I was really amazed that they would try to turn Wanted into a movie. The comic requires at least a passing familiarity with the comic book world to work. The whole work is like looking at a negative of a DC comicbook. I don't think the movie public has the appreciation of comics to 'get' the tweaks to the genre.

My guess is that the whole 'keepers of the balance' thing is a cover up while they indoctrinate Wesley. They reveal that they are super villains who control reality and Wesley starts a resistance against them. It will have little to do with the original book.
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top