The Big Picture

  • 2015's Fantastic Four was a complete failure, plagued by a terrible script, odd casting, and studio meddling.
  • Marvel is rebooting Fantastic Four with a promising new cast, hoping to do justice to the iconic characters in the MCU.
  • Director Josh Trank faced studio interference, leading to budget cuts, bad CGI, and a messy production.

There are blockbuster disasters, and then there's Josh Trank's Fantastic Four (or Fant4stic, if you're cool) from 2015 starring Miles Teller, Kate Mara, Jamie Bell, and Michael B. Jordan. Both developed and released at the absolute height of the superhero movement, there is no reason that Fantastic Four should have failed... and yet here we are. Marvel is trying once again to reboot the iconic characters with their own live-action movie, and it looks quite promising, with Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach officially bringing the heroes into the MCU. The cast of 2025's Fantastic Four is also set to star Natasha Lyonne, Julia Garner, John Malkovich, Paul Walter Hauser, and Ralph Ineson as Galactus.

Leading up to the 2015 movie, people were rightfully excited. You couldn't walk five feet without ending up in a line that stretched around a movie theater, waiting to be seated for a new Avengers or DC project. With Fantastic Four, we were promised a darker and more grounded portrayal of these classic Marvel characters, one that would keep them fresh and exciting for fans and newcomers alike. Unfortunately, things didn't exactly shake out that way.

Fantastic Four 2015 Film Poster
Fantastic Four (2015)
PG-13
Superhero
Sci-Fi
Action

Four young outsiders teleport to an alternate and dangerous universe which alters their physical form in shocking ways. The four must learn to harness their new abilities and work together to save Earth from a former friend turned enemy.

Release Date
August 4, 2015
Director
Josh Trank
Cast
Miles Teller , Michael B. Jordan , Kate Mara , Jamie Bell , Toby Kebbell , Reg E. Cathey , Tim Blake Nelson
Runtime
100 Minutes
Main Genre
Action
Writers
Jeremy Slater , Simon Kinberg , Josh Trank

The Fantastic Four Is a Hot Marvel Comics Property

This is one of those films that misfired in just about every way possible. It had a terrible script, odd casting decisions, a promising up-and-coming director who unfortunately was paired with the wrong project, and more. But above all, there was a boatload of studio meddling. Yes, from both a critical and box office perspective, this reboot was a complete and utter failure. It's a shame because, on paper, the influences and ideas for this movie honestly sounded pretty intriguing. Josh Trank has even been candid about the project in the years since, longing for fans to see the movie that he originally intended. Whether that would have actually been better, we'll never know. All of that seems to be left behind, all the way back in 2015.

There was a time when the Fantastic Four were some of Marvel's most popular superheroes, but their live-action films have never exactly taken off with moviegoers. So while comic book fans are likely familiar with this team, they aren't exactly Marvel's number one property on the big screen and need a bit of brushing up for general audiences. The Fantastic Four is made up of Reed Richards (the elastic Mr. Fantastic), Sue Storm (the Invisible Woman, which explains itself), Johnny Storm (the fully engulfed Human Torch), and Ben Grimm (a pile of rocks better known as The Thing).

They kicked off Stan Lee's first successful title for the Silver Age of comics, which is generally considered to have run from 1956 to 1970. This colorful cast of characters often ventured out on cosmic adventures, battled the likes of the metal-faced Doctor Doom and big-headed Galactus, and saved the Earth more times than anyone can count. They're a bit sillier than many of Marvel's more popular characters, but they've managed to keep going after decades upon decades.

The Fantastic Four Has Never Quite Landed for Moviegoers

Before 2015's Fantastic Four, the titular team had already been brought to live-action on three different occasions. There's the failed 1990s Roger Corman production, as well as the two mid-2000s Tim Story films, Fantastic Four and Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. Each of these had the typical light tone of the comic books, but none of them took the world by storm. So once Josh Trank entered the picture, he was ready to do something new with these characters. Early word was that his reboot would be wearing a David Cronenberg influence, with the movie telling a story of characters whose bodies are changing without them knowing how to react. Sounds like a bit of an odd angle to go at with this particular team of positive and fun superheroes, but sure!

The Fantastic Four Doesn't Make Sense as a Gritty Drama

The Fantastic Four from the pages of Jack Kirby Marvel comics
Image via Marvel Comics

What ended up coming to pass was a studio (20th Century Fox) that did not trust the artists that they hired at all. Casting approvals and script finalizations were delayed, the budget was hacked away by tens of millions of dollars, and major changes to the film's story were being forced as filming began. Multiple major action scenes were cut from the film at the last minute, too, with the final edit of the movie being taken away from Trank. Studio interference drove the director to allegedly behave erratically on set, making production a total nightmare. Why studios don't simply trust the people that they hire, we'll never know. Word is that Fox wanted even bigger names for their titular team, but Trank got what he wanted in Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara, and Jamie Bell. On paper, that sounds like the cast for a great movie. Once you actually look at who they're playing, things get a bit hairier.

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Teller could be a good Reed Richards, but in 2015, he was too young and a bit too cool. Kate Mara's persona is a bit subdued for the likes of Sue Storm. Jamie Bell just feels totally miscast as Ben Grimm, lacking the age and loudmouth nature of that character. Michael B. Jordan as the Human Torch is the only one that feels like a solid choice, given his age and jock sensibilities. The good side to this is that an artist got what they wanted. The bad side is... these picks are a bit odd. Maybe they would have been better if production wasn't so troubled, but we'll never know that for sure. Even Trank himself is an odd pick for the movie, given the only other film he had made was the dour found footage film, Chronicle. That being said, this was the beginning of the practice that we still see, where young and exciting filmmakers are ushered into bigger franchises after previously only making one small movie. Trank fit the bill, so Fox took a chance on him... only to backpedal after it was too late.

Because the budget was hacked to pieces, the movie ended up looking incredibly cheap. None of the action is believable, the green screen worlds look atrocious, and costumes, wigs, and The Thing's CGI all look like Halloween costumes. For most other superhero movies, this would be a huge problem, but the 2015 Fantastic Four isn't all that interested in being a typical superhero movie. A few of its body horror moments do actually work, like when Reed Richards first wakes up in a lab after having gained his elastic powers, or when Doctor Doom (Toby Kebbell) walks around a military base, telepathically blowing up soldiers' heads. These moments don't require flashy special effects. Instead, they rely more on their actors, as well as the tone and filmmaking style that Trank actually seemed interested in chasing. These bright spots are few and far between, though. By and large, Fantastic Four is a tough watch.

Josh Trank Has Mixed Feelings About His Marvel Mishap

Kate Mara, Miles Teller, and Michael B. Jordan as Sue Storm, Reed Richards, and Johnny Storm looking serious in a meeting in Fantastic Four
Image via 20th Century Studios

This was all made more fun by the fact that just before the movie was released, Josh Trank took to Twitter and said "A year ago I had a fantastic version of this. And it would've received great reviews. You'll probably never see it. That's reality though." He deleted the Tweet soon after. However, in 2019, Trank hopped on Letterboxd and elaborated on his thoughts. In this review of his own movie, Trank said "The movie is ALRIGHT. I was expecting it to be much worse than it was. I literally haven’t seen it since like two weeks before it came out, and I was in a heavily fucking traumatized state of mind. Why? Eh, save that for another time." He went on to praise the cast but then questioned whether or not they ended up making the movie that they initially hoped to.

Don't get your hopes up for a "Trank Cut" either, because he even goes on to shoot the likelihood of that down. The review basically wraps up with Trank recognizing the difficult circumstances that he was facing going into his second movie and seems to have a bit of peace about it all. Given what he was dealt, Trank deserves that at the very least. Still, the movie only grossed $167 million on a reported $120 million production budget, so sequel plans were scrapped. Yes, a Fantastic Four 2 was planned for a June 2017 release date, but that got axed soon after its predecessor failed to reign in audiences. This was at a time when superhero movies were regularly and effortlessly grossing a billion dollars, so scoring a little over a tenth of that was not a good look. At the time of release, Trank was even signed on to make a Star Wars film but left that project after this experience to work on something smaller. It's amazing how much can fall apart in the wake of one movie's missteps.

In the end, on paper, Fantastic Four is a movie that sounds like it should have worked. Odd casting choices, a director who wasn't exactly right for the job, and a mountain of studio interferences made that an impossibility, though. Even if the filmmaker and his cast didn't perfectly fit the Fantastic Four mold, Fox should have just left it all alone. Surely they would have made a better movie than this. Let's hope that, if it could be anything, that Fantastic Four will forever be a reminder of why studios should leave their artists alone.

Fantastic Four is available to watch on Max in the U.S.

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