Fantastic Four (2015) Full – Most Popular Movie streaming
Here is Review imdb Movie box office. Top Rated Review with insane article full streaming and downloading. Go to Full article sources for complete review. I Hope you enjoy with this Review.Did you know that Marvel’s Film would be a superhero factory in the world? has many superhero who was born to a mother who was very productive as marvel. All the pieces were in place for a refreshing entry in the superhero genre, but Fantastic Four completely unravels at the halfway point.
Maybe “Fantastic Four” is a cursed property, or maybe just one that shouldn’t be turned into a film? In any case, this new version, directed by Josh Trank, is the third major big screen attempt to tell the story of Reed Richards, Sue and Johnny Storm, Ben Grimm aka The Thing and Dr. Doom, the core characters in one of Marvel Comics’ most durable properties. The good news is, it’s short. The bad news is, it feels longer than an afternoon spent at the DMV—and at least at the DMV, you can pass the time by people-watching. There are no people to watch in “Fantastic Four,” only collections of character traits and attitudes brought fitfully to life by actors who might’ve mistakenly thought they were hitching a ride on the superhero movie gravy train by signing up for this misfire.
In Fantastic Four (2015), Reed Richards (Miles Teller) is a young genius whose scientific pursuits are light years ahead of his teachers. An under-appreciated outcast, Reed forms an unlikely partnership with classmate Ben Grimm (Jamie Bell), the only person to encourage young Reed’s single-minded scientific pursuits. For half a decade, the pair work toward building a teleportation device, demonstrating their prototype in a local science fair – which courts scorn from the local science community, but catches the eye of the brilliant Dr. Franklin Storm (Reg E. Cathey), who believes Reed’s invention is the key to cracking inter-dimensional travel.
Storm recruits Reed to join his own son Johnny (Michael B. Jordan), adopted daughter Sue (Kate Mara) and eccentric tech-prodigy Victor von Doom (Toby Kebbell) in creating a Quantum Gate, in hopes of using the devive to travel into uncharted worlds where humanity can harvest new energies. However, when Reed and his fellow inventors decide to journey through the Quantum Gate ahead of schedule, an accident on “Planet Zero” leaves each of them with horrifying genetic mutations – which, when used for the greater good, affords the young inventors the power to become a team of superheroes.
The movie starts off on an intriguing note, with 11-year old Reed Richards and his buddy Ben Grimm meeting for the first time when Reed sneaks into Grimm’s family’s junkyard to steal a transformer he needs to build a tiny teleportation device. Then the movie flashes forward to the present day, with Reed, now played by Miles Teller, and Ben, played by Jamie Bell, wreaking havoc with their invention at a science fair. Although the machine browns-out the power and creates an unnerving rumble and shatters a backboard in the gymnasium, it’s an impressive enough display to cause Dr. Franklin Storm (Reg E. Cathey) to hire Teller to work at the Baxter Institute, which has been trying to solve the mystery of Planet Zero, the place where Reed’s teleported objects always end up.
The next hour of the film is another superhero origin story, introducing the doctor’s two kids, the super-intelligent, science-minded Sue Storm (Kate Mara) and her juvenile delinquent brother Johnny (Michael B. Jordan, who’s introduced in a street race that feels like an outtake from a “Fast and the Furious” movie). The comic’s arch-villain Dr. Victor von Doom (what a name; wonder if he changed it from “Vahndüm”?) is also part of the team, and if you know even a little bit about the source material, you wait for the other iron boot to drop and turn him into an all-powerful megalomaniac. Doom used to be Sue’s boyfriend and doesn’t take kindly to the way she and Reed banter over keyboards and monitors. He’s played by Toby Kebbell, who, to borrow a line from Andrew Sarris, looks like half the waiters on Melrose Avenue, but is quite good. His world-weariness and punk-Byronic glowering contrasts appealingly against the blandness of the other characters—even Jordan’s Johnny, who’s supposed to be a hot-rodding bad-boy a la Han Solo but reads, rather like Chris Evans in the last “Four” films, like a muscular male ingenue who occasionally quips and sneers.
For a while, anyway, “The Fantastic Four” seems to be re-conceiving the superhero movie as a scientific mystery-adventure about how to solve the puzzle of the teleportation gate, send a manned mission to Planet Zero, and see what’s there. This is only a partially effective approach, though, because the characters are so flat that not even this gifted cast can fill them with life, and because we’re waiting for the characters to gain superpowers and figure out how to master them and then become a team.
Easily the biggest disappointment of the film, Kebbell’s biting portrayal of Victor is squandered once the character reappears as Doctor Doom – reducing one of Marvel’s best, and most intelligent evildoers, into an uninspired crazy person with bizarre motivations – a villain that does not reflect or evolve core themes or the team’s bonding process. Doom’s part in the third act is made even worse by an overly-complex plan that does not set the stage for a rewarding final battle, or make much use of the titular heroes and their individual abilities.
Fantastic Four runs 100 minutes and is Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action violence, and language. Now playing in theaters. Let us know what you thought of the film in the comment section below If you’ve seen the movie and want to discuss details about the film. But if you haven’t, you can watch it now by streaming online here
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