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Frontiers65 wrote:Thought it was lame... The Superman trailer.
Gideon wrote:That's right, being DARK and GRIM and EDGY equates to spectacular narratives, acting, direction, cinematography, etc.
You and the rest of the Starbucks mafia never cease to entertain with your bizarre, contorted qualifications for what does and what does not constitute a film.
Gideon wrote:Nolan is great and so are his films. I just don't think he belches excellence and shits rainbows (they're not nearly DARK and GRIM and EDGY enough). Likewise, I don't think his movies are perfect and untouchable.
Daredevil and the Punisher sequel rivaled the Fantastic Four in their awfulness.
Gideon wrote:Batman not being especially lighthearted isn't a problem. The problem is the pack mentality propagated by the Hot Topic militia that DARKer and EDGier and GRIMmer translates to quality stories. Like I said, in the real world, chocolate can be as trite as vanilla.
YoungJRNY wrote:verslibre, not sure about what you thought of this, but ....
(SPOILER!!!!)
the scene where The Bats shows up from above and helps Catwoman fend off Bane's cronies was powerful from a verbiage standpoint. What Batman said might of been over-looked by the general public but it stood out for me. When Catwoman was going to go off on the cronies, Batman knocked the weapons out of her hands and said "NO GUNS, NO KILLING...."
That was a great moment for me. Great homage to the character (to NEVER kill) that we didn't see in the first 2 flicks as Batman seemed more people-personal in this one once he donned the cowl again.
YoungJRNY wrote:Also loved the respects in the first fight scene with Bane where he use's his knee to jack Batman's back up.
And Batman and the bomb...what a homage. You get it, right?
verslibre wrote:They should have tossed a couple more nuggets into the teaser that's in theaters, like Superman getting tossed into that vault.
Now what's that pile of skulls all about? Hmmm...
YoungJRNY wrote:verslibre wrote:They should have tossed a couple more nuggets into the teaser that's in theaters, like Superman getting tossed into that vault.
Now what's that pile of skulls all about? Hmmm...
I'm thinking he's hallucinating or maybe having nightmare's. Maybe right after he learned he's from another world and him being alone on Earth, he's trapped into the souls and skulls of his Kryptonian people, trapped with nowhere to go with nobody to understand or listen as he has questions on who he really is at the core. This re-imagining is going to run pretty deep into the mindset of a young man who battles having the worlds most intense and advanced powers, but yet, powerless of being a nobody. Not to mention battling the fear of human-being's for revealing himself as Superman, the alien (Supes handcuffed being marched down a hallway by our armed forces, obviously cooperating to our authority. Powerful struggles.) I think Man of Steel is going to define DC-Nation into their next era.
YoungJRNY wrote:I noticed the same thing and initially thought "holy shit, DOOMSDAY" but I do believe it's Zod decked out in full Kryptonian war-armor. The way the picture is takin and watching the trailer, it even comes off as a Doomsday-like pose. What catch's my attention is how Snyder is STILL tight lipped about the 'villains' and still won't even confirm Zod. Another thing, Cavill was asked what comic books influenced him on his take of the character and the Death & Return of Superman was one of them. HMMMM.
verslibre wrote:Gideon wrote:Nolan is great and so are his films. I just don't think he belches excellence and shits rainbows (they're not nearly DARK and GRIM and EDGY enough). Likewise, I don't think his movies are perfect and untouchable.
Daredevil and the Punisher sequel rivaled the Fantastic Four in their awfulness.
Dude, Batman isn't Chihuahuaman. Could Chihuahuaman be DARK and GRIM and EDGY?
Rip said Punisher: War Zone was pretty good so it must be decent.
Rip Rokken wrote:If you haven't seen the Director's Cut of Daredevil, it's MUCH better and includes a whole separate sub-plot that was cut from the theatrical version to save time. It really helps flesh out that film. My main complaint with Daredevil was that the showdown with the Kingpin seemed so rushed and abbreviated. Other than that, I really enjoyed the film and thought Affleck did a very good job.
Rip Rokken wrote:Speaking of Tom Jane... he recently released a short 10 minute "Punisher" film that I believe he self-financed (Ron Perlman appears, too). Jane calls it his "love letter" to the character -- pretty cool! It's called "Dirty Laundry"
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