| Man-Thing | |
|---|---|
DVD cover | |
| Genre | Monster film Superhero film |
| Based on | |
| Written by | Hans Rodionoff |
| Directed by | Brett Leonard |
| Starring | |
| Music by | Roger Mason |
| Country of origin |
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| Original language | English |
| Production | |
| Producers |
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| Cinematography | Steve Arnold |
| Editor | Martin Connor |
| Running time | 165 minutes |
| Production companies |
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| Budget | $5 million[1][2][3][4] |
| Original release | |
| Network | Sci Fi Channel |
| Release | April 30, 2005 (2005-04-30) |
Man-Thing is a 2005monster film based on theMarvel Comics superheroof the same name.[5] Directed byBrett Leonard and written by Hans Rodionoff, it starsMatthew Le Nevez,Rachael Taylor, andJack Thompson, withConan Stevens portraying the title character. The film follows aLouisiana sheriff (Le Nevez) as he investigates a series of deaths in a swamp, leading to him encountering a Seminole legend come to life, theMan-Thing, a shambling swamp-monster whose touch burns those who feel fear.
Originally intended for a theatrical release in the United States,[1] the film premiered on theSci Fi Channel on April 30, 2005. The film received negative reviews from critics and was abox-office bomb. grossing out $1 million from a small release in international theaters.
At Dark Waters, aNative American sacred land containing an enigmatic swamp spirit, a teenager is murdered by a plant-like monster. The following day, young replacement sheriff Kyle Williams reachesBywater and meets with deputy sheriff Fraser, who tells him the previous sheriff is among 47 missing persons since oil tycoon Fred Schist bought the ancient tribal lands from shaman andSeminole chieftain Ted Sallis, the first to disappear. Schist claimed that Sallis had sold the lands legally and then escaped with the money. Schist then asked the sheriff for help: local protesters opposed his perfectly legal activities, andmestizo scoundrel Rene Laroque was sabotaging his facilities. Williams investigates this while trying to find an explanation for the missing people, some of which were found brutally murdered with plants growing from inside their bodies. Photographer Mike Ploog and shaman Pete Horn tell Williams local legends about the guardian spirit, suggesting that it could be real.
As sabotage and murder continue, Williams investigates the swamp with Fraser and finds the previous sheriff's corpse. Medical examiner Val Mayerik admits that the previous sheriff had ordered him to file the deaths as alligator attacks, even if Mayerik believed otherwise.
Williams and Fraser try to track Laroque, who lives in the swamp, by using a canoe. At the same time, Schist sends the Thibadeux brothers, local thugs, to track and murder Laroque. The monster in the swamp finds the Thibadeux and kills them. Williams is ensnared by Laroque, who admits having helped Schist buy the lands. Laroque claims that Sallis was opposed to the sale; Laroque insists that the guardian spirit would keep on murdering until Schist stops desecrating the sacred swamp. Fraser tries to help Laroque, but the Man-Thing timely appears and murders Fraser; Laroque knocks Williams down and escapes. Williams wakes up and finds Ploog, who has blurry pictures of the monster; the sheriff seizes the photographs and forbids Ploog to come back to the swamp.
The following day, Williams interviews Horn and Schist, with the help of schoolteacher Teri Richards' help. Williams starts having romantic feelings for Richards. Horn goes to the swamp and tries to stop the Man-Thing with prayers and sacrificing his own life. The monster kills Horn, but is not otherwise affected by his efforts. That night, Mayerik autopsies the old sheriff and finds a bullet. He tries to tell Williams, but he is back at the swamp, unreachable. Mayerik tells Richards, and she goes to the swamp to tell Williams. Meanwhile, Ploog had returned to the swamp, trying to get a picture of the monster. Instead he startles Schist, who was in the swamp to murder Laroque. Schist shoots and kills Ploog. Soon afterward, Laroque ambushes and defeats Schist's son and minion Jake.
Williams finds Ploog's corpse and reasons that Schist murdered Ploog. He then meets Richards, who tells him about Mayerik's autopsy. Williams concludes that Schist is guilty of several murders, trying to incriminate Laroque simply to avoid punishment. According to Schist's confession to Laroque, he murdered Sallis and buried him in Dark Waters. Due to the magic embedded in the soil, Sallis returned as the Man-Thing. Richards reveals that she can guide Williams to Laroque's lair, but the Man-Thing starts chasing them. He chases them to the drilling tower at Dark Waters. In the tower, Schist is leveling his weapon at Laroque in an attempt to prevent Laroque from blowing it away with dynamite. Laroque nonetheless tries to detonate his bomb and is shot and wounded by Schist; Schist then wounds Williams.
However, the Man-Thing arrives and brutally murders Schist by filling his body with oil. The Man-Thing then moves toward Williams and Richards. Laroque sacrifices himself shouting at the monster and blowing the bomb. The monster survives the flames, but then is absorbed back to the land, allowing Williams and Richards to leave unharmed.
The characters portrayed by Mammone, Zappa, and director Leonard are named afterMike Ploog,Steve Gerber, andVal Mayerik, who all worked on theMan-Thing comic. A photo ofMan-Thing co-creatorStan Lee can be seen on the board of "Missing People" who have been presumably killed by the Man-Thing.
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In 2000,Marvel Entertainment entered into a joint venture agreement withArtisan Entertainment to turn at least 15 Marvel superhero franchises into live-action films, television series,direct-to-video films and internet projects. These franchises included an adaptation of the Man-Thing.[6]Plans to make a film about the character were first announced in 2001.[7] It was variously considered for a direct-to-video release,[8] or a theatrical release.[9] After the success ofStephen Norrington'sBlade (1998),Bryan Singer'sX-Men (2000),M. Night Shyamalan'sUnbreakable (2000) andSam Raimi'sSpider-Man (2002) the film was moved to a theatrical release to exploit on the success of superheroes.[10]
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Man-Thing was shot completely on location inSydney, Australia; locations includedWisemans Ferry, Serenity Cove Studios atKurnell for exterior swamp scenes andHomebush Bay.[11] Although filming was originally intended to be done inNew Orleans, budget realities forced production to be relocated toAustralia. The film was the first to use the new Kurnell studios and enlisted regional actors for every role.[1][3][12][13]
On October 27, 2003, it was reported thatArtisan Entertainment, which had partnered withMarvel Enterprises in the production ofMan-Thing andThe Punisher films, was being purchased byLionsgate Films.[14] In February 2004, the film production and distribution companyLionsgate merged with Artisan Entertainment and received the film rights toIron Fist, theBlack Widow, theMan-Thing and thePunisher.[10] In January 2004, producerAvi Arad said that the Man-Thing was more of a departure from the original comic than were Marvel's other film characters in that it was ahorror film with a menacing central character.[7] In April 2004, the film had been completed, with the finished print received and waiting to be tested with audiences, after which an exact release date would be determined. The film wasrated R for violence, grisly images, language and some sexuality by theMotion Picture Association of America (MPAA).[7]
Avi Arad, then CEO ofMarvel Studios, admitted that it was a mistake not keeping tabs on the production, as it was being filmed so far away inAustralia. He stated "The one hiccup we had was the one project we didn't micromanage. We were not going to the Outback, there was so much going on. We will never do that again. We should never have trusted anybody that far away without our supervision. Thankfully it was a small movie and not a disaster. If we were there and on top of it, it would have been a[n] amazing movie. I look at the [horror] genre, and I think 'Sh--, I can't believe this'. We've learned our lesson."[15]
Marvel Studios producerAvi Arad said "the lead character in the Man-Thing movie would be a combination of prosthetics and computer-generated effects."[7] From the outset, Man-Thing was intended to be a prosthetic, CG-enhanced creature. Arad told The Continuum during a visit to Marvel Studios, "So there was a great deal of R&D.... There's positional stuff happening on location, on the set, but at the same time the stuff you don't currently see in camera was always engineered to be enhanced by digital effects. So when you see the movie, hopefully the line is pretty blurry. It's not an all-CG creature."[7]
Special effects makeup was by the Make-Up Effects Group ofAustralia.[7]The Man-Thing was built as a full-size creature suit, portrayed byConan Stevens, a 7-foot-1-inch (216 cm)Australian actor, ex-wrestler and stuntman.[7]
Although no full-digital Man-Thing model was made due to budgetary constraints, the suit was combined with digital moving branches and tendrils for certain sequences, also well as digital augmentation for the eyes.[7] Brett Leonard quoted, "We had to constantly replace mud to get enough mud in certain areas. And we had to build up mounds of mud, because mostly it was a tank of water."
"This was like working in water, mud, and weird slime the whole time. It basically, even though it was not a toxic real swamp, like the other part we were making, but this was the man-made swamp," the filmmaker adds. "It actually became a bit toxic because one day, for one of the scenes coming up, we had to create a bigger mound of mud and the Australian crew went to grab some bags of like Fuller's earth to build the mud mound up.
Due to these budgetary constraints, most scenes featuring Man-Thing, including ones that would have provided a backstory for the monster, had to be removed, with some later reused in a tie-in comic miniseries.[16] As a result, Man-Thing only appears in around seven minutes of the film.
The band AzUR (DOG Productions' Wayne and Luke, joined by Bec And Freddie) recorded the song "The Man-Thing Lives Again" which was played over the end credits of the film. It was supposed to be released as a promotional video, but since the film was in a constant state of flux (financial, script, etc. ...) and was not going to theatres (as intended), the music video was pulled for lack of budget. Marvel did not want to leak advance images of the set and creature costume before the film's eventual release. One of the band members has worked on the footage and uploaded a remix onYouTube.[7]
| Man-Thing: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soundtrack album by | ||||
| Released | March 17, 2009 | |||
| Genre | Film soundtrack | |||
| Length | 66:28 | |||
| Label | Nice Spot | |||
| Marvel Comics film series soundtrack chronology | ||||
| ||||
TheMan-Thing album was composed byRoger Mason and was released on March 17, 2009. The soundtrack consists of 21 tracks. Its duration is over an hour long. The album was released by Nice Spot.[17]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Opening/ Swamp" | 2:30 |
| 2. | "Billy & Sarah" | 2:23 |
| 3. | "Old Sheriff's Office" | 3:10 |
| 4. | "People Are Dying" | 1:36 |
| 5. | "Ploog/Something's Out There" | 1:42 |
| 6. | "Asylum/Trouble At The Plant" | 2:50 |
| 7. | "Corley Drops In/ Autopsy" | 5:55 |
| 8. | "Gerber Is Nervous/ Meeting la Rogue" | 2:18 |
| 9. | "Gerber's Body" | 1:25 |
| 10. | "Descent Into Deep Swamp" | 2:35 |
| 11. | "Sacred Land Man/ Dwayne Goes Down" | 3:09 |
| 12. | "Kyle Paddles Upriver/ Snared By la Rogue" | 7:35 |
| 13. | "Ploog's Photos/ Schoolyard" | 2:27 |
| 14. | "Everyone Will Die" | 6:14 |
| 15. | "Pulled Apart Like a Puppet" | 2:16 |
| 16. | "Pete Prepares to Meet his Fate" | 5:49 |
| 17. | "Kyle Might Be In Trouble" | 1:22 |
| 18. | "Finding the Dark Water" | 7:33 |
| 19. | "Spirits of the Dark Water" | 0:53 |
| 20. | "Shist Shoots Kyle & Rene" | 4:05 |
| 21. | "Man Thing Returns to the Swamp" | 2:41 |
In October 2003,Man-Thing had been scheduled for release on August 27, 2004.[1] The US release date was set forHalloween (October 31) 2004,[7] but whenMarvel Enterprises released its second quarter financial report,Man-Thing was included in the 2005 line-up with a release date to be decided. Reportedly, the film was so bad that the test audience walked out before it was finished. So, Marvel put it back on video in the United States, since it would not be bankable in a domestic release. The film was released internationally in places likeRussia and theUnited Arab Emirates.Man-Thing was released on April 30, 2005, as a "Sci-Fi Original" on theSci-Fi Channel.[7]
The film premiered inSingapore on April 21, 2005.
The film was released onDVD andVHS on June 14, 2005, in the United States.[18]
It was released as a two-disc DVD inRegion 2 format.[19]
While the film was released direct to television in North America, it played theatrically in three international markets where it accumulated $1,123,136 in box office grosses.[20] On April 28, 2005,Man-Thing opened inRussia and four otherPost-Soviet states:Armenia,Belarus,Kazakhstan, andMoldova.[21][22] The film opened on October 26, 2005, in theUnited Arab Emirates.[23]Finally, the film opened inSpain on March 3, 2006.[24]
Man-Thing received negative reviews from critics. Upon its release,Man-Thing holds a 14% approval rating onRotten Tomatoes based on seven reviews.[25]
Felix Vasquez fromCinema Crazed gave the film a negative review, writing, "While the special effects are really good, and the directing is decent, this just ends up becoming a really bad movie botching a really good concept".[26] David Nusair fromReel Film Reviews awarded the film 1 out of 4 stars, calling it "the worst comic book movie ever made".[27] Jon Condit fromDread Central gave the film a rating of 1.5 out of 5, writing, "Maybe in more capable hands than Brett Leonard's this could have been a creepy, albeit cheesy monster movie, but instead it just ends up falling flat."[28] David Cornelius fromeFilmCritic.com gave the film 2/5 stars, stating that the film was "too lame to be genuinely entertaining, not stupid enough throughout to be laughable".[29] Adam Tyner fromDVD Talk awarded the film 2/5 stars, calling it "thoroughly mediocre".[30] Andrew Smith ofPopcorn Pictures rated the film a 5/10, calling it "[a] Wasted effort but watchable anyway".[31]
To coincide with the film's release, Marvel published a three-issue tie-in comic miniseries titledMan-Thing (Vol. 4), written by Hans Rodionoff and illustrated by Kyle Hotz. The series served as a prequel to the film and incorporated some unused scenes and concepts originally written for the movie's screenplay.[32][16]
The series centers around an insurance investigator who travels to the swamp to investigate a series of mysterious accidents believed to be caused by the mythical Man-Thing.
In May 2004, writer Hans Rodionoff stated that there had been some "very preliminary" discussions regarding a sequel and that he had already been exploring ideas, such as introducing Man-Thing-centric characters from the comics likeJennifer Kale andHoward the Duck.[16] The project never materialized, largely due to the film's critical failure.
The character's film rights, along with the other Marvel characters whose film rights were previously acquired by Artisan Entertainment, have reverted to Marvel.[33][34]
The Man-Thing appears in the 2022Marvel Cinematic Universe specialWerewolf by Night, motion-captured by Carey Jones and withJeffrey Ford providing additional vocalizations.[35]
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