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John Stewart or Hal Jordan

Choose a Lantern


  • Total voters
    40
  • Poll closed .
Jack Burton from Big Trouble in Little China IS Guy Gardner.

Good god that man/character could talk some self-obsessed bollocks.
 
Guy would have to be portrayed by someone who could pull off cock-sure and self-aggrandizing, but also play the subtler moments where you realize he's a good guy underneath it all.

Kurt Russel could certainly do that.
 
Isn't Kurt Russell also too old at this point, though?

It could be cool if the sequel (provided this first one proves to be a success) featured both Guy Gardner and John Stewart, maybe with some threat that requires all three of them to work together.
 
The "good Guy" under it all kind of ruined the character for me.

Even finding the back issues that situated that he was brain damaged from a coma ruined it for me, then when they retroactively said that alien godmonsters fought through time in his mind kicking the shit out of his decency in the pages of Warrior just made me want to cry.

Guy Gardner is not complex.

He's a bit of a dick.

besides, who else but the braindamaged are completely devoid of fear?
 
He's not that good a dude, but it really depends on the writer. Sure, he always had heart, but still an asshole. Of coure, these days he's not nearly as scummy as he was when Giffen and deMatteis wrote him. He's merely abrasive. It's a bit of a shame, since the awfulness made him more unique.

Oh, and of course, the answer to the OP is Kyle Rayner. Especially from a filmic standpoint, the Rayner era is potentially the most interesting, because he would have the best villain. Specifically, Hal Jordan.
 
Again, he's the only one. And it's been 3 years since Hancock... And then it's Will Smith staring at the Green Lantern... would the studio want that? I'm not sure... And Will Smith is expensive.

I don't know.

True nuff. Though in fairness, there aren't a lot of movies period with $150 million+ budgets, and few of those (that I can see) are focused on a single person. And a couple are animated.

This is pretty much true.

If you're going to cast Stewart, you get Smith if he's available and you can afford him - every other option is inferior from a commercial standpoint.

:techman:

There are other black actors out there, and to be a bit frank, Denzel is quite old to be playing John Stewart (and may not even want to.)

Now, if only I could think of anybody else in the same age group as Ryan Reynolds that could play John Stewart... could anybody help me out here?

Reynolds is 34 and Will Smith is 42, so...

Chiwetel Ejiofor? (33)
Idris Elba? (38)
Terrence Howard? (41)

They may be somewhat obvious choices though, I guess.

Ten years ago, Keith David, Laurence Fishburn, or Forest Whitaker would've been great choices. Probably too old to serve as the main lead now (David almost certainly), though I'd be happy with any of them.
 
Again, he's the only one. And it's been 3 years since Hancock... And then it's Will Smith staring at the Green Lantern... would the studio want that? I'm not sure... And Will Smith is expensive.

I don't know.

True nuff. Though in fairness, there aren't a lot of movies period with $150 million+ budgets, and few of those (that I can see) are focused on a single person. And a couple are animated.


Consider every single super hero movie from the past decade. Spiderman, Batman, Wolverine, Green Hornet, Superman, Iron Man

Or the Harry Potter movies.

Almost now ALL the summer tent pole movies are over 100 million, if not 150 million.
 
Since no one else is going to say it.

I am going to say it...

Wanye Brady.

How about Cockroach? Y'know from ER and Lie to me?

Malcolm Jamal Warner looked goooooood on Community last week.

John is a marine and an architect. I think he used the marine corps to get an education, but he was quite young in the 70s when he begun histaining as the emergency replacement lantern.

But then it's not like Hal Jordan didn't have to sneak out of prison to fight evil in the beginning that it was so outrageous if John had to risk being classified AWOL if Hector Hammond orthe Shark were proving to be difficult assholes.
 
True nuff. Though in fairness, there aren't a lot of movies period with $150 million+ budgets, and few of those (that I can see) are focused on a single person. And a couple are animated.


Consider every single super hero movie from the past decade. Spiderman, Batman, Wolverine, Green Hornet, Superman, Iron Man

Or the Harry Potter movies.

Almost now ALL the summer tent pole movies are over 100 million, if not 150 million.

$100 million, absolutely - even Catwoman and Fantastic Four cracked that number. But most of the 41 $155 million plus crowd (especially for superheros) are sequels or threequels, and only one Harry Potter cracked $155 million. Spider-Man, Batman Begins, XMO: Wolverine, The Green Hornet, and Iron Man were all at $150 million or less (Iron Man, Spider-Man, The Green Hornet were less). Hancock's apparently going to get a sequel, and I'm betting it gets a larger budget.

I think you've got a good point overall though - it just requires a little more trust in the non A-Listers (or even B-Listers sometimes) of the comic verses.

John is a marine and an architect. I think he used the marine corps to get an education, but he was quite young in the 70s when he begun histaining as the emergency replacement lantern.

ISTR John's marine background was retconned in because of the Justice League cartoon, wasn't it?
 
Not sure.

I have a Green Arrow and John Stewart comic from the early 80s, and there's no way he would have survived in the military with that attitude. Chip on his shoulder acting like a baby assuming he is being patronized by the superhonkeys.

7808.jpg
 
True nuff. Though in fairness, there aren't a lot of movies period with $150 million+ budgets, and few of those (that I can see) are focused on a single person. And a couple are animated.


Consider every single super hero movie from the past decade. Spiderman, Batman, Wolverine, Green Hornet, Superman, Iron Man

Or the Harry Potter movies.

Almost now ALL the summer tent pole movies are over 100 million, if not 150 million.

$100 million, absolutely - even Catwoman and Fantastic Four cracked that number. But most of the 41 $155 million plus crowd (especially for superheros) are sequels or threequels, and only one Harry Potter cracked $155 million. Spider-Man, Batman Begins, XMO: Wolverine, The Green Hornet, and Iron Man were all at $150 million or less (Iron Man, Spider-Man, The Green Hornet were less). Hancock's apparently going to get a sequel, and I'm betting it gets a larger budget.

I think you've got a good point overall though - it just requires a little more trust in the non A-Listers (or even B-Listers sometimes) of the comic verses.

I agree. But, sadly, I don't think the studios have that trust. Maybe on a 50 million dollar movie.
 
Kyle Rayner is fail.

Sure, but in an affable way, whereas Hal Jordan is a humorless dick, a drunk driver, an ephebophile, and a mass-murderer.

But I never really disliked him till he came back. Same deal with Barry Allen and Ollie Queen. I think I just hate zombies.

(And John Stewart is okay.)
 
Reynolds is 34 and Will Smith is 42, so...

Chiwetel Ejiofor? (33)
Idris Elba? (38)
Terrence Howard? (41)

They may be somewhat obvious choices though, I guess.

Ten years ago, Keith David, Laurence Fishburn, or Forest Whitaker would've been great choices. Probably too old to serve as the main lead now (David almost certainly), though I'd be happy with any of them.

Howard is headed for a fall, just like Charlie Sheen, or so I've heard. The first two guys are fine, though.
 
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