As more and more comic book movies get made about beloved characters, the risk of Hollywood filling those characters with suck increases.

Spider-Man+3's+Venom

Green+Lantern's+Sinestro

Green+Lantern's+Amanda+Waller

X3's+Angel

X3's+Juggernaut

X-Men+Trilogy's+Cyclops

Batman+Forever's+Two-Face

Hal Jordan's Green Lantern, and a few members of the GL Corps, are the latest casualties that got lost in the translation from page to screen. To celebrate (or mourn) the occasion, we look back at 15 characters the movies just plain got wrong.Venom is a hugely popular villain/anti-hero, and his presence usually brings fans running with fistfuls of money. It's clear Sony was fit to burst by the time they unleashed Venom upon the movie-going public. Unfortunately, that meant the character was shoehorned into Spider-Man 3 without proper buildup or careful handling.Casting Topher Grace as the dark antithesis of Peter Parker didn't really help matters. Hopefully the Spider-Man reboot will be a little kinder to Venom, as well as a little more willing to wait until the right time to make use of him.The movie would have you believe that Sinestro is just a guy loyal to the Corps, who gives speeches that inspire space cops to point their jewelry skyward.Fans of the comics know that Sinestro is a much more dynamic character; a solider fighting for the side of good as long as it was in service of his needs as well. This leads to Sinestro embracing the Yellow impurity (re: fear) and becoming a villain, engaging in will-powered ring brawls with Hal Jordan.As Hal's former mentor, there's a lot of history between these two that fuels their rivalry, none of which we even got a hint of in the movie. Worse, the movie's Sinestro determines that the only way to fight Yellow is with Yellow, and impresses upon the Guardians the idea to forge a yellow ring to fight Parallax… which they never use. *head desk head desk head desk*Mark Strong is great in the role, but the role as written fails him.No idea why this character with clandestine authority was slapped with a graying Egon Spengler wig and added to the movie just so she can get tossed into glass.In the comics, Waller is a hard-ass government player who shaped the Suicide Squad. In the movie, Waller is the equivalent of a Red Shirt with a "where the eff does this come from?" origin story shoehorned into a movie full of uneven beats and wasted everythings.And that hair? Seriously? It's like that guy's hair who's in your comic shop all day and helps the owner, but doesn't seem to actually have a job there.There was nothing overtly wrong with Angel's portrayal in X3. The problem was that the movie barely made use of him at all. Rather than being one of the founding X-Men like in the comics, Angel was a flying plot device who contributed nothing to the final battle aside from saving his rich, stuffy father from going splat.In the comics, Juggernaut is the brutish half-brother of Charles Xavier whose inner rage is made manifest thanks to a mystical ruby that grants him incredible strength.In X3, he was a soccer hooligan in a rubber muscle suit who busted through a few walls. The writers seemed more interested in paying homage to the "I'm the Juggernaut, bitch!" YouTube meme than providing a faithful adaptation of the character.Scott Summers can't compete with Wolverine's rampant popularity, but Cyclops was given more heroic moments in the 1990s cartoon on FOX than he was in 20th Century Fox's movies. James Marsden is a strong actor who did the best with what he had in the Singer films, but he and the character were terribly wasted by the time X3: The Last Mouthfart rolled around. The X-Man died off-screen. He's a hero; he deserves to die like one.Should the new X-Men movie franchise involve Cyclops, let's hope they give him more to do then get called a "dick" by Logan.Tommy Lee Jones is a great actor, a fun choice for the role. And the character has plenty of screen time in this less-than-great bat sequel, but neither Jones nor Harvey are given very much to do. How the movie chose to interpret the character is all wrong; this Harvey Dent is more like an exaggerated neon version of The Animated Series' take. Complete with Drew Barrymore and Debi Mazar sidekick wenches!