We KNOW which John will show up.  "Shaft" all the way. For the simple  
fact that  he's considering Tyrese for this role and not putting Omar  
Epps in the gym. The only thing that's guesswork about this movie is  
how much  of a role Busta Rhymes is going to  have. I know I'm  
largely pessimistic about this sort of thing, but I honestly believe  
that there are  enough black filmmakers who actually read comics and  
have an actual  presence in the genre that  should  be doing this  
movie.  I would much rather see Antoine Fuqua do Green Lantern (WITH  
Hal Jordan, mind you) than John Singleton do Power Man.  For that   
matter,  somebody  may as well  make a "Strangers in Paradise"   
movie. that's how obscure Luke Cage is. He's getting more play now in  
the New Avengers books than I've seen in years.


On Jan 19, 2006, at 10:09 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Don't know how I feel about this. On the one hand, I like well done  
comic-based movies. But I also know it's too easy for them to become  
corny and camp. Spider-Man, Hellboy, Sin City,  and Batman Begins  
rocked; Daredevil, Elektra, and Fantastic Four were awful. And let's  
not even discuss those movies I bet no one here even saw: The  
Punisher, Nick Fury, that horrible Generation X flick on Fox.     
Singleton is talented, but you never know which John will show up:  
the one who gave us great drama in "Boyz in Da Hood" and "Four  
Brothers" , humour in "Baby Boy"; or the hack behind  throwaway fare  
like "Too Fast, Too Furious" and the unnecessary remake of "Shaft".   
If he brings the same "Shaft" sensibility, forget it.

You especially have to be careful bringing Black characters who  
supposedly "say" something to the screen.  "Shaft", like it or not,  
made important statements about society. He showed a Black man who  
worked for himself, didn't take guff off Da Man, and was cool in a  
time when we were just discovering how to be proud of ourselves.  
(Yeah he was sexist too, but stay with me). The character was  
relevant back in the day. But trying to bring the exact same  
character to the screen today didn't work, because the definition of  
"what is a Black man?" has changed.  Samuel Jackson was reduced to a  
cliched leather-wearing character in a forgettable movie. We've had  
the same problems when things like "Charlie's Angels", "The Mod  
Squad", "The Stepford Wives", etc, have been remade. All made some  
sort of statement back in the day, but trying to recapture the exact  
same message today hasn't worked.  And often, when the serious  
message of the original has been deemed outdated or irrelevant,  
Hollywood has elected to forgo the seriousness and just make a  
comedy. Thus, the comedic "Stepford Wives", and the upcoming comedy  
"The Six Million Dollar Man", in which Jim Carey will play a  
buffoonish cyborg. Joy.

Power Man was ostensibly a superhero symbol for Black kids, a powered  
Shaft who, like that detective, worked for himself and took no guff  
off anyone. Cage worked with white folk like Iron Fist because he  
*wanted* to, not because he had to. He was meant to be a symbol of an  
emerging sense of pride, strength, and coolness in Black America.   
But does that exact message work today? Do we need to see another  
Black man who's tough and spits in the face of authority, who is too  
cool for school? I don't know. What's the definition of a hero in our  
community now? What message does a Power Man need to convey? Somehow  
I think that just beating up on evil members of the System just ain't  
gonna cut it.  Who's the enemy now: Da Man, Islamic terrorists,  
homegrown white supremacists, drug-dealing Brothers in our own  
communities?

Maybe Singleton too will forego the message and just make a fun  
movie. I hope he can pull it off, 'cause there'd be nothing sadder  
than seeing a boring action flick, or an unfunny comedy about a man  
running around letting bullets bounce off his chest.

http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1520415/story.jhtml
Tyrese Keeps Working Out In Case Superhero Role Works Out
Actor/model desperately wants to play Marvel Comics character Luke Cage.

Tyrese Gibson stands more than six feet tall, crammed with hulking  
muscle. In this month's naval drama "Annapolis," the camera  
admiringly zooms in on his massive arms as he portrays a merciless  
commanding officer and boxer. By the time he's done preparing for his  
dream role, however, his current appearance will seem scrawny by  
comparison.

"I'm probably going to be benching about 415 pounds once I get into  
that mode," Gibson said with a grin as he discussed his desire to  
play Luke Cage in an upcoming superhero flick from the makers of "The  
Fantastic Four" and the "Spider-Man" films. "They're just saying that  
'Luke Cage was a real big and muscular guy, and we want to make sure  
that you appear to be that.' "

For the benefit of those poor souls who wasted their childhoods  
playing outside, Cage has filled the vibrant pages of Marvel Comics  
for more than three decades and was the first black character to  
receive his own comic book series. Developed to capitalize on the so- 
called "blaxploitation" film trend of the 1970s, Cage possesses  
superhuman strength and resistance to injury, the result of  
scientific experiments he underwent while in prison for a crime he  
didn't commit. Something of a cross between Shaft and a member of the  
Black Panther party, Cage is a "hero for hire" who's been known to  
invoke the catchphrase "Sweet Christmas!"

It was this past Christmas season that was particularly sweet for  
Tyrese, as he continued to receive indications that Marvel would  
select him from a wide range of rumored names (including Jamie Foxx)  
for the high-profile gig. "They have me in mind, along with a few  
other people," he said, not wanting to jinx himself. "Do I have a  
better chance at getting it? Probably."

Tyrese would indeed seem to have the inside track, as "Luke Cage"  
director John Singleton has worked with him three times ("Baby Boy,"  
"2 Fast 2 Furious" and "Four Brothers") and has stated that he'd like  
Marvel to hand the role to his frequent leading man (see "Tyrese As  
Luke Cage? Maybe, Says John Singleton"). In order to show Marvel that  
it'd be making the right decision, the star recently began a strict  
workout regimen that will hopefully render him superheroic.

"I just have to get in shape for it; that's the only thing," he said.  
"They want me to be really massive, and big, and it's going to  
require a whole other level."

Marvel Chairman and CEO Avi Arad has stated that he expects the film  
to be brutal enough to earn an R rating, and that longtime nemesis  
Diamondback will be the film's villain (Terrence Howard has been  
frequently linked to the role). "This will [have an] urban  
soundtrack, it will be great," Arad said of his goals for the film.  
"The whole idea behind Luke Cage is that he's anything but a hero.  
He's [a mercenary] for hire, and men like that find out it's a good  
business by accident. And then [find out] what's really inside him."

With Singleton and Arad looking to move forward in the production  
process, Tyrese plans to continue preparing himself for a once-in-a- 
lifetime part that he sees as far more than just another superhero  
flick. "It is important," he said of Luke Cage's trailblazing legacy.  
"Dave Chappelle said it. He said, 'Never be the first black person to  
ever do something, because you're going to go through way more hell  
than anybody else [who is] just following in their tradition.'

"The idea of [Cage] being the first-ever black comic-book hero was a  
lot, as far as a statement," he added, looking ahead and keeping his  
muscular fingers crossed. "Those are big shoes to fill, man, and I've  
got to do it and do it right."   — Larry Carroll

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




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