The Fantastic Four: First Steps I lost a huge opportunity with one of Marvel’s most visually creative superheroes. Reed Richards, aka Mr. Fantastic, should be an elastic power with skill that challenge the laws of physics. In the film, however, those powers have just touched.
What should have been a performance of inventive, wild and exaggerated images turned into a silent and limited showcase that seemed more a rethinking than a culminating point.
Now, credit where it is due, the film has done a decent job in interpreting Reed’s intellect and leadership. It is caring, composed and clearly the group’s brain. But this is only half of the photo. In the comics, Reed has an thin charm and an embarrassing charisma that makes it comparable and admirable.
That part of his personality was barely explored. He did not need to make jokes or go in full Tony Stark, but a little more of emotional depths and shades would have made him feel more alive.
The greatest disappointment, however, was the way the creative team of the film managed its powers. Mr. Fantastic can stretch, mold, twist, flatten, inflate … call it. There are moments of comics in which he used his body as a network, he wrapped around huge cosmic entities such as Galactus and has transformed himself into practically any form necessary to solve a problem.
But in the film, his powers are very underutilized and limiting. At some point in the film we are watching Galactus Strech Mr. Fantastic as an elastic and is screaming in pain.
When you see to what extent the elongation capacity goes to the comics, Galactus stretches him that way shouldn’t have been a problem for him because it was nothing compared to what we saw him do in the comics!
We barely see one of those fantastic images of the comics in this film. His moments of action are rigid and not inspired. Instead of showing Reed’s resilience, he made him weak. The film has ignored everything fans know how beautiful and versatile his powers are.
The creativity behind Reed’s skills is what distinguishes him in the superhero panorama. His power set should be a director’s playground. You can do so much with the elasticity and adaptability of his body, yet the film seemed afraid of going there.
We did not see him Shift in creative ways, use his body as a shield or slingshot, nor do we do something simple as multitasking with extensive limbs in a moment with a high postal content. They kept his skills small, which is the opposite of what Mr. Fantastic should be.
At the end of the day, The Fantastic Four: First Steps He did not give Mister fantastic the treatment he deserved. His powers were underutilized, his moments of brilliance were too few and his potential was left on the table.
Reed Richards is a genius, yes, but it is also a Swiss man’s knife of superpowers. I hope the future film will fully embrace what makes Mister Fantastic really fantastic.
By Joey Gour
Source: Geek Tyrant

Lloyd Grunewald is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. He is a talented writer who focuses on bringing the latest entertainment-related news to his readers. With a deep understanding of the entertainment industry and a passion for writing, Lloyd delivers engaging articles that keep his readers informed and entertained.