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Josh Trank says he felt “castrated” during Fantastic Four’s enforced reshoots

May 13, 2020 by Gary Collinson

Some five years on from the disastrous release of 20th Century Fox’s Fantastic Four reboot, Chronicle helmer Josh Trank returns this week with his third movie, the Tom Hardy-headlined Al Capone biopic Capone.

During the press tour for Capone, Trank has been chatting about a couple of his unrealised projects in his R-rated Venom pitch and aborted Boba Fett Star Wars Anthology movie, and now he’s also opened upon about his experience on Fantastic Four (a film which is sure to feature prominently when I write my essay on disastrous superhero movies!).

Trank revealed that he felt “castrated” during the extensive reshoots enforced upon him by Fox, which were supervised by producers Simon Kinberg and Hutch Parker.

“It was like being castrated,” Trank told Polyon. “You’re standing there, and you’re basically watching producers blocking out scenes, five minutes ahead of when you get there, having [editors hired] by the studio deciding the sequence of shots that are going to construct whatever is going on, and what it is that they need. And then, because they know you’re being nice, they’ll sort of be nice to you by saying, ‘Well, does that sound good?’ You can say yes or no.'”

SEE ALSO: Fantastic Four director Josh Trank reviews his own movie on Letterboxd (and gives it 2 stars)

Trank explained how his vision for the movie clashed with that of writer Jeremy Slater, who wanted to retain the ‘comic booky’ aspects of the comics – something that Trank said “was not a tone that I felt I had anything in common with.”

Going into production on the film without a completed script or ending, Fox considered scrapping the project before allegedly slashing $30 million from the budget and then later plotting extensive reshoots as a reaction to a screening of his first cut, and the growing negativity among fans on social media:

“They really do pay attention to what people are saying on Twitter,” said Trank. “They look at that and they say, ‘Shit, people are freaked out about how it’s not going to be funny. So we need to spend $10 million to do a comedy rewrite’.”

Ultimately, the producers were unable to salvage the film and Fantastic Four tanked at the box office upon its release, which was preceded just days prior by Trank publicly denouncing the film on Twitter.

Fantastic Four featured a cast that includes Miles Teller (Whiplash) as Reed Richards/Mr. Fantastic, Kate Mara (House of Cards) as Sue Storm/The Invisible Woman, Michael B. Jordan (Fruitvale Station) as Johnny Storm/The Human Torch, Jamie Bell (Nymphomaniac) as Ben Grimm/The Thing, Toby Kebbell (Dawn of the Planet of the Apes) as Doctor Doom, Reg E. Cathey (House of Cards) as Dr. Storm, and Tim Blake Nelson (The Incredible Hulk) as Harvey Elder/Mole Man.

 

Originally published May 13, 2020. Updated May 18, 2020.

Filed Under: Gary Collinson, Movies, News Tagged With: fantastic four, Josh Trank, Marvel

About Gary Collinson

Gary Collinson is Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Flickering Myth. He is a film, television and digital content writer and producer, whose work includes the gothic horror feature The Baby in the Basket and the suspense thriller Death Among the Pines. He is also the author of Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing the Caped Crusader to the Screen.

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