Monker wrote:verslibre wrote:Monker wrote: Judging by the lack of commentary in this forum to the reaction to the trailer - I am very much in the right. The only ones who went ga-ga over it were comic book nerds. Well, correction, DC comic book nerds.
The nerd calling a nerd a "nerd" trope.
I didn't call anybody specific. If you want to include anybody specific into the "DC comic book nerds" group - that's your choice.
Uh-huh. Not specific, just
implied. My remark stands.
Monker wrote:It's utterly hilarious how you're using "this forum" — not a comics/CBM forum, and barely more than a Journey worship forum — as some kind of barometer by which to gauge enthusiasm for a movie
I didn't do that either.
Of course you were: "lack of commentary in this forum." You absolutely were. Which is hilarious.
Monker wrote:I am simply saying that if there was a huge amount of public praise for the SS teaser you two would have posted about it here. You didn't.
We did. We have. As far back as Comic Con weekend in July when the trailer debuted. Remember my pointing out top trends on Twitter? Roughly a half-dozen were Comic Con-centric at all times, and on Saturday, when the big trailers dropped,
BvS and
SS were right in there. I pointed all that out. But you still do the
La-La-La thing. That, or you're only reading every other post on every other page.
Monker wrote:What I read was generally people scratching their heads with a "WTF was that?" reaction.
Where? On the back page of the
Des Moines Dingleberry? I saw loads of expletive-laden excitement and remarks about how some liked the
SS trailer
over BvS. This is all between three major CB/CBM forums, Twitter, IMDb, Yahoo comments, followers of Schmoes Know and DC Movies Talk, "and on...and on...and on...it's Heaven and Hell!"
Monker wrote:The only people who generally praised it were DC comic book nerds...and that should already be expected.
Wrong again. Quite a few people waiting for these movies don't even read the comics. Isn't that something you also like to point out, btw? Seriously, dude. Stop trying so hard. I don't know what the basis for your anti-DCEU agenda is, but it's getting creepy.
Monker wrote:And, I already told you that I know from experience that those numbers are inflated and 90% of them are generally not active on the forums...if you have 500 people signed up for a forum, MAYBE 5 of them will be active posters. To get those numbers to be up to date and accurate takes FAR more effort that any administrator is willing to take. How many of those members have stopped visiting the forum? How many of those ID's are duplicates? How many of these ID"s are signed up with deleted Email accounts? How many signed up to make one post and then never returned? How signed up and never posted at all? How many signed up 5yrs ago, posted for a year...and then never returned? Admins generally do not manage such things...besides, high numbers like that look cool.
Why don't you just go have a look for yourself:
http://forums.superherohype.com Right now it's near
midnight PST, and there are 670 users online (590 members, 80 guests). There are 16,815,692 total posts. There are 50,358 registered members. So if you want to suggest roughly 20% of them are linked to dead emails and no-shows, that's still 40K+. Most users ever online: 4930 (5/2012). I expect that number to be exceeded next year, for obvious reasons.
Monker wrote:not to mention the size of an event like CCI in San Diego (and the New York Comic Con is right behind it in terms of attendance), the biggest of its kind in North America.
So, you think that the success of this movie can be sustained only by DC comic book nerds who attend cons. Wow, you are so wrong. Watchmen.
You're twisting my words. SDCC is a physical event with roughly 130-150K attendees, but it also has a wide-reaching virtual presence thanks to everyone who monitors what comes out of there. Overall, it has a global presence. Hit the search engine and research it, if you feel like you can be bothered.
Monker wrote:No, I face reality. The reality is for comic book movies to be so hugely successful, they need to branch out beyond their genre. Marvel knows that and does it well.
Now you're shooting yourself in the foot. Marvel — not Fox, not Sony —
Disney-Marvel has come under fire for the homogenized feel their movies have, with the exception of
Cap 1/Cap 2. From
Iron Man all the way up through
Ant-Man, there is an identifiable formula intrinsic to the MCU canon. It's as if they were all cut from the same template and finished off with different scratches and nicks. People are looking forward to the contrast the DCEU films will bring: they're going to be darker,
far less silly, and the villains won't be treated like flavor-of-the-week punching bags. (What happened to Malekith and Ultron is truly sad.) And I'm sure we won't have to worry about
Justice League 2 mirroring
Justice League beat-for-major-beat the way Joss did with the
Avengers/AoU.
Monker wrote:Sorry, spent a week at Cocoa Beach back in July - that's where I got my tan.
Cue Louie CK's "burst into flames" joke.
Monker wrote:Like it or not, most people don't know Batman from the comics - but from movies and TV. Same with Superman.
Oh,
man. I hope I don't lose sleep over this.
