The Fantastic Four: First Stepsdirector Matt Shakman has addressed the movie’s practical effects and CGI in a new interview promoting the upcomingMCUmovie. From what we can see from the firsttrailer forThe Fantastic Four: First Stepsand other promotional images, the movie will strike a distinctly retrofuturistic aesthetic. This has raised questions about how theMCU movie will navigate special effectswhen its tone feels like something from the 1960s.

Matt Shakman spoke about this in an interview withEmpire Online, stating that he wanted to make it feel like it was from the period by using practical effects, stating “I really wanted it to feel like it was made in 1965, the way Stanley Kubrick would have made it,” and revealing that he and the team “Used old lenses, and taken an approach to filmmaking that feels more of the time.” Shakman also admits, however, thatThe Fantastic Four: First Stepswill not shy away from CGI, stating, “Of course, we still have a lot of CG.”

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Shakman also reveals that a 14-foot-high spaceship model was used during the filming in a practical effect evocative of those used in the 1960s and 1970s. He further reveals that the aim ofThe Fantastic Four: First Stepswas to make it feel as grounded as possible, stating of its tone:

“I really wanted to go with as grounded a version of space as possible…So, no wormholes. Their tech is very much retro-future, but it’s also booster rockets. It’s a combination of Marvel and Apollo 11.”

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What The Fantastic Four: First Steps Director’s CGI Comments Mean

Leaning Into Practical Effects Is A Winning Formula For The MCU

Matt Shakman’s comments suggest thatThe Fantastic Four: First Stepswill tread a fine line between practical and special effectsto help make an inherently outlandish setting feel as grounded as possible. At the same time, images ofEbon Moss-Bachrach’s Thingreveal that he is rendered entirely with CGI, in stark contrast to the fully practical suit worn by Michael Chiklis in 2005’sFantastic Fourand its sequel. This certainly feels necessary in the modern age of the MCU, however, as modern CGI has come on leaps and bounds.

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This is also a winning formula for the MCU.A recent example of practical effects hitting the mark with fans isAgatha All Along, which was filmed almost entirely on a practical set rather than a green screen while using CGI to render such things as Wiccan’s magic. It will be interesting to see howThe Fantastic Four: First Stepswill handle the mind-bending scale of its main antagonist, Galactus, though we can be confident that depictions of such things as Mister Fantastic’s stretching powers will be almost entirely CGI-rendered.

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Our Take On The Fantastic Four: First Steps Director’s CGI Comments

Shakman’s Comments Are A Positive Sign

Given the MCU’s track record with practical effects, Matt Shakman’s comments fill me with confidence.Agatha All Along’s practical effects may be a more recent example, but we also have such grounded MCU movies asCaptain America: The Winter Soldierto help prove the correlation between practical effects andquality in the MCU. While I am not suggesting thatThe Fantastic Four: First Stepsshould strike the same grounded tone as that particular movie, it feels like Shakman is taking the right approach with this project, and I look forward to seeing the results.

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