& Whats your impression of it?

Moderator: Andrew
tater1977 wrote:Have you watched the movie "Thor"?
& Whats your impression of it?
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
No Surprize wrote:Along with Wolverine, the best super hero movie that was made.
Gideon wrote:No Surprize wrote:Along with Wolverine, the best super hero movie that was made.
Wolverine left me with a bad taste in my mouth. {No jokes, assholes!}
But Thor was very good.
Ehwmatt wrote:Gideon wrote:No Surprize wrote:Along with Wolverine, the best super hero movie that was made.
Wolverine left me with a bad taste in my mouth. {No jokes, assholes!}
But Thor was very good.
Wolverine just felt too rushed.
verslibre wrote:The Dark Knight.
Gideon wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Gideon wrote:No Surprize wrote:Along with Wolverine, the best super hero movie that was made.
Wolverine left me with a bad taste in my mouth. {No jokes, assholes!}
But Thor was very good.
Wolverine just felt too rushed.
Add 'sloppy' and I'll give you a thumbs up for this post. The massive continuity error that is Sabretooth's relationship with Logan is... severe.verslibre wrote:The Dark Knight.
I used to think that, too. Saw the film 6 times or so in the theater and was just floored by the plot and Ledger.
Now I think a lot less of it. From a storytelling perspective, I think Nolan was ridiculous the way that he made the plot fit the Joker's equally ridiculous schemes. It seems very forced.
Gideon wrote:I think I'd agree, but I haven't seen Begins in years. Neeson, Murphy, and Wilkinson were a great trifecta of villainy, though.
I just disliked the way Nolan became a complete and total Joker fanboy. The Joker is so intelligent as to approach psychic, able to detect the precise time and distance a bus will travel through a wall to incapacitate his attacker? He's so rhetorically gifted as to be able to persuade Harvey dent to unleash his wrath in Gordon and Batman's direction for failing to save his girlfriend rather than the guy who intentionally killed her? And Batman, who was willing to let Ra's al Ghul die in the first film... feels inclined to spare the Joker??
Gideon wrote:I think I'd agree, but I haven't seen Begins in years. Neeson, Murphy, and Wilkinson were a great trifecta of villainy, though.
I just disliked the way Nolan became a complete and total Joker fanboy. The Joker is so intelligent as to approach psychic, able to detect the precise time and distance a bus will travel through a wall to incapacitate his attacker? He's so rhetorically gifted as to be able to persuade Harvey dent to unleash his wrath in Gordon and Batman's direction for failing to save his girlfriend rather than the guy who intentionally killed her? And Batman, who was willing to let Ra's al Ghul die in the first film... feels inclined to spare the Joker??
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
Gideon wrote:From a storytelling perspective, I think Nolan was ridiculous the way that he made the plot fit the Joker's equally ridiculous schemes. It seems very forced.
Ehwmatt wrote:I've realized that Batman Begins is far and away the stronger film. It just doesn't have the tour de force that was Ledger's performance as Joker. But overall, it's a much better film.
Gideon wrote:I just disliked the way Nolan became a complete and total Joker fanboy.
Ehwmatt wrote:Good points about The Joker. It definitely became a lot more comicesque in large part because of the scenes you cite here.
tater1977 wrote:Have you watched the movie "Thor"?
& Whats your impression of it?
verslibre wrote:Gideon wrote:From a storytelling perspective, I think Nolan was ridiculous the way that he made the plot fit the Joker's equally ridiculous schemes. It seems very forced.
With as long a film as it, it felt forced? The Joker's mind does not traverse the boundaries of a rational person's, so where you see something ridiculous, I see great characterization.Ehwmatt wrote:I've realized that Batman Begins is far and away the stronger film. It just doesn't have the tour de force that was Ledger's performance as Joker. But overall, it's a much better film.
I enjoy both films thoroughly and it's hard to pick one over the other. Yes, it's Ledger's performance, but it's also the best follow-up to the best origin film. When the third movie is out, it'll be the third act, presumably the most violent, and it'll be best to consider all three as one long chronicle. There's nothing wrong with preferring Begins, but to say it is "far and away the stronger" of the two is too arguable a point to ever be considered gospel. It's not the same case as with, say, the first two X-Men films, since the first one is a laugh riot, so the second film is indisputably recognized as "far and away" the better of the two.Gideon wrote:I just disliked the way Nolan became a complete and total Joker fanboy.
What a weird thing to say. I don't recall anyone saying that about Nicholson's Joker in 1989. The Joker is the most famous of the Bat-villains. The Joker is to Batman as Lex Luthor is to Superman as Sinestro is to Green Lantern as The Red Skull is to Captain America. Nolan's interpretation of Batman is based on select Bat-titles, including Year One, and (for Joker), The Killing Joke. Read up on these and you'll have a better connection to what's going on in the films.Ehwmatt wrote:Good points about The Joker. It definitely became a lot more comicesque in large part because of the scenes you cite here.
As opposed to what? It's a film sourced from various Batman titles. Any superhero film requires suspension of disbelief. As for Ra's al Ghul, was he a criminal being actively pursued by Gotham's finest?
Rip Rokken wrote:tater1977 wrote:Have you watched the movie "Thor"?
& Whats your impression of it?
I've seen it twice and really liked it -- it was pretty good, but I don't think it was one of the best. Though there is a decent amount of angst, it became fairly light-hearted once he got to Earth and never really developed the emotional depth that films like the Spider-Man series or Iron Man did.
[/quote]verslibre wrote:Gideon wrote:From a storytelling perspective, I think Nolan was ridiculous the way that he made the plot fit the Joker's equally ridiculous schemes. It seems very forced.
With as long a film as it, it felt forced? The Joker's mind does not traverse the boundaries of a rational person's, so where you see something ridiculous, I see great characterization.Gideon wrote:I just disliked the way Nolan became a complete and total Joker fanboy.
What a weird thing to say. I don't recall anyone saying that about Nicholson's Joker in 1989. The Joker is the most famous of the Bat-villains. The Joker is to Batman as Lex Luthor is to Superman as Sinestro is to Green Lantern as The Red Skull is to Captain America. Nolan's interpretation of Batman is based on select Bat-titles, including Year One, and (for Joker), The Killing Joke. Read up on these and you'll have a better connection to what's going on in the films.
Return to Snowmobiles For The Sahara
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests