Marvel and DC Comics have both become known for their assorted attempts to bring their most famous and beloved characters to the big screen in live-action. Many of these attempts have succeeded greatly, introducing some of the best and brightest heroes and villains of the comic book medium to fans and viewers around the world who would ordinarily never engage with something like a graphic novel.Movies like The Dark Knight, Avengers: Infinity War, Spider-Man 2, and Logan are all standouts in the genre of superhero stories adapted for live-action, but there seems to always be something missing with these adaptations. Sometimes it’s a minor thing like the look of a character, but sometimes, it’s a larger issue, like the way something is shifted from its source material to be more “realistic” for movie audiences. This is an unfortunate result of trying to make comic stories more accessible, as well as more doable in the medium of live-action — and it’s one of the main reasons that animation is becoming more and more known as the definitive means of adapting comic book stories.The X-Men films’ refusal to embrace comic book costumes is one of the worst changes a Marvel movie made from the comics. It’s also a major example of the kind of fear often associated with comic adaptations, a phenomenon that rarely occurs with animated versions. In fact, the X-Men have had numerous successful animated series that drew heavily from the comics to great effect.
Marvel and DC Comics have both become known for their assorted attempts to bring their most famous and beloved characters to the big screen in live-action. Many of these attempts have succeeded greatly, introducing some of the best and brightest heroes and villains of the comic book medium to fans and viewers around the world who would ordinarily never engage with something like a graphic novel.
Movies like The Dark Knight, Avengers: Infinity War, Spider-Man 2, and Logan are all standouts in the genre of superhero stories adapted for live-action, but there seems to always be something missing with these adaptations. Sometimes it’s a minor thing like the look of a character, but sometimes, it’s a larger issue, like the way something is shifted from its source material to be more “realistic” for movie audiences. This is an unfortunate result of trying to make comic stories more accessible, as well as more doable in the medium of live-action — and it’s one of the main reasons that animation is becoming more and more known as the definitive means of adapting comic book stories.
The X-Men films’ refusal to embrace comic book costumes is one of the worst changes a Marvel movie made from the comics. It’s also a major example of the kind of fear often associated with comic adaptations, a phenomenon that rarely occurs with animated versions. In fact, the X-Men have had numerous successful animated series that drew heavily from the comics to great effect.
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