The Latino Review recently caught up with writer/producer
Simon Kinberg and asked him about the upcoming Fantastic Four reboot, X-Men:
Apocalypse, and Gambit movies, as well as Comic-Con plans.
"We think about these X-Men movies as spread
over – X-Men: First Class, Days of Future Past to Apocalypse was
imagined as a trilogy for us," he said, when asked if he sees the
franchise being like Marvel Studios' Phases. "It’s the Origin stories in some ways of Charles, Raven, Hank and
Eric and we will be settling things up in Apocalypse that will
be generating new stories. We look at it globally as to where to mutants fit
into the world. That’s why we jump from the 60’s to the 70’s and now the 80’s.
We really want to be able to track the progression of the world and where do
mutants fit in that world. It’s a pretty radical thing to do in any movie but
certainly in a superhero franchise where you are jumping a decade each time you
make a film. The reason that it is globally is that we wanted to be able to
track the impact of mutants and the emergence of mutants into the world.
Personally, we are very clear from the beginning as to how Charles, Eric and
Raven especially dovetail, duck and weave in and out of each others lives. We
were building, in some ways, a trilogy that is a story of three people; a
brother, a little sister and another man who comes, in some ways, as a brother
and how that sister leaves with the new brother. The war for that sisters’ soul
between these two men defines First Class, Days of Future Past and Apocalypse. That’s
a larger story we are telling even though each of those films is its own
coherent and complete film. You can look at the arc of those three characters
almost like a television show arcing over three complete episodes."
He was then
asked about Channing Tatum playing Gambit on the big-screen and if the
character will be introduced in a team movie first, before getting his own
solo movie or vice versa.
"I genuinely don’t know the answer to that question," Kinberg responded. "It’s something we are all talking about whether it would be good for Gambit to be in a mainline X-Men movie or he would be in his own stand-alone movie potentially one day to be able to be in another X-Men movie after
his Gambit movie introduces him. I really don’t know the answer. I don’t think there is a hard and fast rule which way is better. I think both ways have worked and I think actually the real question will be is there a role that is strong and specific enough for Gambit in a mainline X-Men movie whether it be Apocalypse or future X-Men movie that would be the right way to introduce the character. You don’t want to stick characters in these movies and manufacture something for them to do. You want the movie to tell you that it needs another character or ideally it needs this specific character." Simon Kinberg was then persuaded to talk about the identity of the Four Horsemen in X-Men: Apocalypse. "I will tell you this and obviously there are a lot of different versions of the Horseman over the books, and this will not reveal any of the identities so I apologize in advance," he started. "I will let you know that our choosing of the Horseman was something that we, Bryan and myself took very, very seriously and did only after an exhaustive review of all the different Horseman, both in the comics and the cartoons who have at one point or another fallen under Apocalypse."
"I genuinely don’t know the answer to that question," Kinberg responded. "It’s something we are all talking about whether it would be good for Gambit to be in a mainline X-Men movie or he would be in his own stand-alone movie potentially one day to be able to be in another X-Men movie after
his Gambit movie introduces him. I really don’t know the answer. I don’t think there is a hard and fast rule which way is better. I think both ways have worked and I think actually the real question will be is there a role that is strong and specific enough for Gambit in a mainline X-Men movie whether it be Apocalypse or future X-Men movie that would be the right way to introduce the character. You don’t want to stick characters in these movies and manufacture something for them to do. You want the movie to tell you that it needs another character or ideally it needs this specific character." Simon Kinberg was then persuaded to talk about the identity of the Four Horsemen in X-Men: Apocalypse. "I will tell you this and obviously there are a lot of different versions of the Horseman over the books, and this will not reveal any of the identities so I apologize in advance," he started. "I will let you know that our choosing of the Horseman was something that we, Bryan and myself took very, very seriously and did only after an exhaustive review of all the different Horseman, both in the comics and the cartoons who have at one point or another fallen under Apocalypse."
Kinberg was then
asked if there will be anything from the new Fantastic Four reboot at this
year's SDCC.
"No, I can definitively officially tell you that
there will not be anything from Fantastic Four at this year’s Comic Con. We are still very much in the
middle of shooting and we don’t want to show anything until it’s ready and it’s
not ready yet. We want the first stuff that we show from the film to really
blow people away, and it will but we have got to wait until it’s ready. We
are hopefully going to be refining the way the people see the Fantastic Four movies. There are so many
things we are doing different from the previous film and so many things
different from other comic books films. When we really step forward we want it
to be with our best foot forward. Instead of rushing something together for the
Con we’d rather really wait until we have that perfect first image, perfect
first sequence and first scene to show people. And I know that there’s a lot of
people that think that’s the big surprise from Fox this year at the Con and
knowing that I’m talking to a reporter and I’m going on record that I’m saying
unfortunately that will not be a surprise for the fans of Comic-Con this year.
Obviously the Comic-Con world is incredible important to Fantastic Four and because of that we want to give
them the best version of what we are making."
Kinberg then commented on actress Kate Mara, aka Sue
Storm's comments that the reboot isn't based on any specific comic like X-Men:
Days of Future Past.
"I actually think that this Fantastic
Four movie is
sort of a celebration of all the Fantastic Four comics that have preceded
it," said Kinberg. "We have elements from the original Fantastic
Four that
there’s a sort of optimism and inspirational quality to the film. In some ways
a comedy that was really distinct in the original Fantastic
Four. Also, the notion of this
dysfunctional surrogate family that comes together and has to work together is
very present in the movie that owes a great debt to the originals. And this
idea that they are scientist and that it’s almost like this science adventure,
more than being superheroes, they are almost like scientific adventurers,
that’s a big part of the movie too. We also owe a lot to the Ultimate’s and the
current crop of Fantastic Four comics and you’ll see that. I don’t want to
give anything away but you will see it in the details and a lot of the story
telling. It’s really sort of inspired by all the different history of the
Fantastic Four comics. I think what Kate meant, and I read that comment, I
think what she meant which was right is that it’s not based on any one run. Days of
Future Past was
obviously based on Days of
Future Past comic run
and that was something that I could easily give the actors to read and they’d
know the whole story. In this case because we are really snatching details,
story lines, moments, action sequences from across the whole gambit of the
decades of Fantastic Four, there isn’t one comic that defines the movie."
Source - Latino Review
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