I never did... but someone accused me of trolling.Which is legit. But I don't see the need to veer from film criticism to insulting the people who do like it.Everyone's mileage may vary, but I think it is a mess.
I never did... but someone accused me of trolling.Which is legit. But I don't see the need to veer from film criticism to insulting the people who do like it.Everyone's mileage may vary, but I think it is a mess.
I've squawked a lot on this thread about how over-rated this film was, and most people just responded by saying that it's just a fun movie, with nothing deeper. I can understand that... sure.. but I don't quite buy it. This movie achieved most of its prominence because it has Marvel stamped on it, and all that entails. I just wish people would be honest.. this film would be called the utter mess that it is if it hadn't had that label on it.
That may be, but I see it as very messy and cavalier scriptwriting from writers who just want to splash as many catch-phrases into their script as they canGamora also doesn't get a very limited figure of speech, "Footloose", poles up their butts. The kind of figures of speech that don't 100% translate from language to language and culture to culture HERE let alone across the galaxy.
So, her not understanding those terms is very different than Drax not understanding the throat gesture as being a metaphor for killing someone, considering it's a relatively "common-looking" gesture that the other aliens in the room understood and is probably pretty universally understood on our planet since most people would get the idea that slitting the throat is lethal to all living creatures. Drax doesn't understand metaphors and there's many others he's exposed to over the course of the movie he didn't immediately grasp (like "things going over his head" later in the security room.)
Drax's lack of understanding of metaphors is very different than Gamora not understanding the terms "footloose" and "poles stuffed up their butts."
- I don't like how Marvel split the difference with their main character. What I mean is that, you think being an abducted human, he'd be the fish out of water character, serving as the audience's eyes through the story, and we learn as he learns, like the Last Star fighter. That kind of thing. But he was adducted at an early age (before he was old enough to understand half of the Earth references he makes in the film) and so he is already familiar with this world that is being explored, at least until the writers need him not to know something because we need to know it. So, to me, he's a lazy misture of both kinds of main characters (fish out of water POV character, and charactr who know's their universe) because Marvel was pretty lazy at deciding. This makes it hard for me to really care about this character. And many of his best traits were better played by Harrison Ford in other movies anyway.
- Groot can do anything, whatever the script needs. This makes him uninteresting. Tension is dissolution whenever he is around.
+1.Works for me.James Gunn clarifies his crossover remarks from Comingsoon's site.
“All I’ve ever tried to say was the Guardians are an important part of the MCU, and they definitely share an existence with the Avengers and other characters in the MCU. But the week after the movie opened I walked into the Marvel offices, and I sat down with Kevin Feige and some of the other folks at Marvel. We had a long discussion about where the Guardians were headed and what was happening to them. I told them exactly what I wanted to do with the sequel to Guardians, and everyone was on board and excited. And, regarding the bigger picture, we all agreed on one thing, and that was to keep huge chunks of the Guardians separate from the Marvel heroes of earth, because they have a whole galaxy to explore. We wanted to use them as a way to make the MCU bigger, not smaller. We wanted to make sure they have their own mythos, as opposed to only one that is intertwined with the earthbound characters. They ARE connected, of course, but that connection would not be the purpose of their stories and fictional lives.’![]()
Seriously. Anybody that claims it's the best film ever or even the best comic book film ever is clearly delusional, but as we all should know from being Star Trek fans, fandom being gung-ho about their chosen properties does not devalue the media itself...just makes some people look stupid.It's not that it was overrated, it was more underrated.
We don't know that. One other person agreed with Quill when he asked, but he also says "No" twice immediately after. He seems to answer differently depending on who is looking at him for an answer...or he changes his answer because he's scared of Drax. Could go either way.[...]Drax not understanding the throat gesture as being a metaphor for killing someone, considering it's a relatively "common-looking" gesture that the other aliens in the room understood[...]
I never did... but someone accused me of trolling.Which is legit. But I don't see the need to veer from film criticism to insulting the people who do like it.Everyone's mileage may vary, but I think it is a mess.
my opinion is not trolling. if it didnt have marvel stamped on it people wouldnt be trying to defend this mess
again my opinion
I understand your point.
I just don't think the film would have been as respected, well-regarded, or popular if Marvel hadn't slapped their name on it.
That's not meant to offend anyone
Not trolling, sure; but it's rather offensive to suggest that there's so many people completely blinded by no more than a brand name, wouldn't you say?
We don't know that. One other person agreed with Quill when he asked, but he also says "No" twice immediately after. He seems to answer differently depending on who is looking at him for an answer...or he changes his answer because he's scared of Drax. Could go either way.[...]Drax not understanding the throat gesture as being a metaphor for killing someone, considering it's a relatively "common-looking" gesture that the other aliens in the room understood[...]
I just don't think the film would have been as respected, well-regarded, or popular if Marvel hadn't slapped their name on it.
Talking trees have already been successful in films (The Two Towers) and talking CGI creatures have been successful as well. Plus I am sick of hearing people say how risky this was for Marvel.. all that talk fed into the curiosity and more people went to see it, not less.
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