Not that I'm saying that Ratner did any better, but here's why.
I just borrowed the Dark Phoenix Saga TPB from my library. It was the first time I've read it in years. Man, if there was a pitch perfect X-Men story, it was that. Simply blows every X-story of the past 20 years away (sorry Morrison and Whedon fans). As tired as the adjective "epic" is used to describe these types of stories is, it fits the Dark Phoenix Saga perfectly.
Which brings us to Bryan Singer.
The guy can't do epic, as evidenced by Superman Returns. And that's not his fault. He has an art house pedegree and I wouldn't expect him to wrap his head around such concepts as the Shi'ar Empire and the destruction of whole galaxies. But those are intergal to the DPS. Anything less diminishes the emotional impact of the storyline. Knowing Singer, he might have made Phoenix level a few buildings, maybe a continent or two if he had the guts. And since he already painted himself in the corner with the whole "realism" angle, there wouldn't have been nary an extraterrestrial in sight. In the hands of a more visonary filmaker, the third X-Men movie not only would have been the perfect oppurtunity to expand the Marvel Universe introducing non-mutant heroes, but the actual universe within the Marvel Universe if that makes sense. Singer, sad to say, doesn't have the ambition, range, and vision to properly adapt the DPS without making major concessions and watering it down until it's barely recognizable as the DPS.
So unless a really good animation group or that mysterious visionary filmaker steps up to the challenge, I'm afraid the real DPS will remain in the comic pages.
I just borrowed the Dark Phoenix Saga TPB from my library. It was the first time I've read it in years. Man, if there was a pitch perfect X-Men story, it was that. Simply blows every X-story of the past 20 years away (sorry Morrison and Whedon fans). As tired as the adjective "epic" is used to describe these types of stories is, it fits the Dark Phoenix Saga perfectly.
Which brings us to Bryan Singer.
The guy can't do epic, as evidenced by Superman Returns. And that's not his fault. He has an art house pedegree and I wouldn't expect him to wrap his head around such concepts as the Shi'ar Empire and the destruction of whole galaxies. But those are intergal to the DPS. Anything less diminishes the emotional impact of the storyline. Knowing Singer, he might have made Phoenix level a few buildings, maybe a continent or two if he had the guts. And since he already painted himself in the corner with the whole "realism" angle, there wouldn't have been nary an extraterrestrial in sight. In the hands of a more visonary filmaker, the third X-Men movie not only would have been the perfect oppurtunity to expand the Marvel Universe introducing non-mutant heroes, but the actual universe within the Marvel Universe if that makes sense. Singer, sad to say, doesn't have the ambition, range, and vision to properly adapt the DPS without making major concessions and watering it down until it's barely recognizable as the DPS.
So unless a really good animation group or that mysterious visionary filmaker steps up to the challenge, I'm afraid the real DPS will remain in the comic pages.