Haven't seen it yet but got bored and spoiled myself silly in here...kind of wish I hadn't, as the movie has a couple of unexpected twists after all...but the cat's out of the bag now.
I've heard of KGBeast, and I'd heard about that ending, but I've never read that story. I never knew KGBeast's real name either. What issues made up the KGBeast story? I might have to see if I can find it on Comixology.
I agree, that trailer was very ill advised. And if I recall correctly, up to that point the marketing had been doing a pretty great job of getting people hyped for the movie. Once that trailer hit a lot of hype died, people started focusing more on the goofy looking Doomsday than anything else.And boy, now that I've seen the movie... that second trailer was a terrible idea. It really DID spoil the entire movie. It shows Doomsday... it shows Wonder Woman appearing to save Batman... why would you give that away? The movie going public has no idea who Doomsday is; he's just another CGI Hulk monster to them, so it means nothing to them. And for the comic fans, you give away the third act surprise. All you need to advertise this movie is Batman beating the crap out of Superman and Wonder Woman appearing in action out of context of the fight. That's it.
I'm finding the reviews saying the film's dull but Affleck's great are confusing me.
I find both a dull Batman Superman movie and Affleck not sucking equally unbelievable...
Well, Mark Kermode (who wanted to like it) just described it as lumpen, stodgy and incoherent.
And Eisenberg was incredibly irritating...
^It's a shame that they'd just kill off Jimmy like that.
Wow ! Didn't catch that.^It's a shame that they'd just kill off Jimmy like that.
I got the impression from some of Alfred's comments early in the movie that Batman wasn't always this violent.Maybe, but I've never been a fan of Snyder's notion (expressed in defending the ending of MoS) that someone has to start out being a killer before they can learn not to be.
Yeah, he'd obviously changed.I got the impression from some of Alfred's comments early in the movie that Batman wasn't always this violent.
And boy, now that I've seen the movie... that second trailer was a terrible idea. It really DID spoil the entire movie. It shows Doomsday... it shows Wonder Woman appearing to save Batman... why would you give that away? The movie going public has no idea who Doomsday is; he's just another CGI Hulk monster to them, so it means nothing to them. And for the comic fans, you give away the third act surprise. All you need to advertise this movie is Batman beating the crap out of Superman and Wonder Woman appearing in action out of context of the fight. That's it.
And Snyder has said that he though it would be a way to "have fun" with the character. This is his idea of fun.
I get the impression that Snyder is basically a '90s comics fanboy -- the kind who thinks ultraviolent, testosterone-drenched antiheroes like the Punisher and Spawn and the like are cool and that nonlethal, upbeat heroes are wussies. I bet he could've made an interesting Punisher or Spawn movie, but it seems an incredibly ill-conceived mismatch to give him control of Superman.
Well I'll still defend his approach in MOS, since that still felt like a fundamentally hopeful and kind and optimistic version of Superman who was at least trying to do something good (despite how dark the circumstances of the story might have been). But the Superman in this movie is so conflicted and dour and closed off from the world (apparently not even bothering to give interviews or reassure people who might be suspicious of him) that it really did feel off and wrong to me.
I'm trying to think if there's precedent for a case where a work of fiction or a classic character was adapted by someone who seemed to have nothing but contempt for the essential principles and ideas of the work.
Paul Verhoeven pretty much hated Starship Troopers, the novel, from what I understand (and gleamed from watching his adaptation of it).
When I read that, before I saw the film I couldn't help but marvel that, apparently, the most important thing to him was capturing the aesthetic. Not the spirit, not the heart, not the essence of the characters but the aesthetic. Yes, it's a visual medium and he undoubtedly makes great-looking films, but if he thinks people are satisfied solely because films look like the source material, he's missing the point.
Paul Verhoeven pretty much hated Starship Troopers, the novel, from what I understand (and gleamed from watching his adaptation of it).
Read the whole interview here.Let’s talk generally in the movie industry rather than specifically. Generally, years ago you were dealing with simply movie studios. Today, the bulk of those studios are worldwide conglomerates that have their hands in many different businesses. Sometimes, unfortunately, people lose track of what is important. As a result, at some points in time, the tail begins to wag the dog. [These conglomerates] become way too focused on merchandizing, toys and Happy Meals, and begin to impose directives that movies should have three heroes, three villains, and each one should have two vehicles and two costume changes. Then the danger you run into — which I have seen over and over again — [is that the movies become] products that closely resemble a two-hour infomercial for toys, rather than a great piece of film that’s character-driven and plot-intensive. That’s sad.
There is another trap in the movie and TV industry, whereby people who do not understand the comics and who don’t have the same respect for the integrity of the character or its creators, are willing to ignore 20, 40, 60 years of history and mythology of a character, and make changes for nothing more than the sake of change or, on some occasions, for [the sake of] someone putting their own ego stamp on it so they can claim it as theirs. I have found that never works.
If, however, a company such as the current management at Warner Brothers, for one example, finds a great filmmaker with a passion for a character and a vision for a character, and gives that filmmaker everything he or she needs to execute that vision, that’s when you get great pieces of cinema like Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises. For example, when audiences walk out of The Dark Knight, they no longer are limited to merely saying, “That was a great comic book film.” They can now say, “That was a great film.”
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