Right, because we all know it's impossible to have any humor in a movie or TV series about a war.
I'm not talking about turning it into GoTG or Suicide Squad, I'm just saying that there could at least be more humor and lighter moments than there were in BvS.
It makes the extraneous sub-plots more coherent, gives Clark and Lois a lot of extra screen time, shows more clearly how Lex is manipulating events. However it does nothing to address fundamental issues such as Lex's motivation for doing all of this, Batman's sudden onset of stupidity and poor math skills, Lois's bizarre nonsense where she nearly drowns herself for no good reason, the awkward foreshadowing that could have been cut right out of the movie or the use of what I can only characterise as sound-bite philosophy in place of actual underlying themes. And the Martha thing still feels deeply unconvincing.This may have been covered earlier in the thread but what's been the opinion on the extended cut of Batman v. Superman?
The former is a reference to him (supposedly the world's greatest detective) missing that Lex is deliberately manipulating both he and Clark despite all the pieces being right there under his nose (quite literally in the case of the wheelchair guy's cheques.)I'm sure it will come to me eventually, but what do you mean by "Batman's sudden onset of stupidity and poor math skills"?
The latter is the whole "1% chance = absolute certainly" tosh.
It's probably a reference to something Dick Cheney said to George W. Bush regarding anti-al-Qaeda policy. (The Israeli security guy in the World War Z movie used a similar phrase to explain his country's early anti-zombie preparations.) As a general formulation, it may precede Cheney in national security circles; I don't know.I understand the sentiment they were going for, but by stating it in mathematical terms it just made it sound really stupid.
Indeed.I might even agree with it if I were convinced that there weren't any other potential world-ending extraterrestrial threats out there. But since we can't say for sure whether there were any other Kryptonian survivors, I think it's better to keep Superman in reserve just in case there is another General Zod out there or some other threat that only Superman is readily available to deal with.
It all sounded completely reasonable (I mean, in the circumstances) for a Batman who'd been broken and driven to cruelty after years of endless and seemingly pointless effort only to have all of his control taken away by a force completely outside his ability to do anything about.
Yeah, 1% =/ Absolute, but we're not supposed to be shown somebody acting reasonable. And his detective work on Lex is still a lot better than most movie Batmen - plus the whole "crisis of everything." This isn't a Bruce on top of his game by any stretch of the imagination - mentally, emotionally, ethically. It's a broken Bat.
It's probably a reference to something Dick Cheney said to George W. Bush regarding anti-al-Qaeda policy. (The Israeli security guy in the World War Z movie used a similar phrase to explain his country's early anti-zombie preparations.) As a general formulation, it may precede Cheney in national security circles; I don't know.![]()
^I understand the sentiment they were going for, but by stating it in mathematical terms it just made it sound really stupid.
Agreed. For comparison, imagine if someone gave you a pill and said "This pill will make you three inches taller and better looking, but there is a 1% chance you will turn inside out and die a horrible, protracted death."I disagree. Even though what he said uses percentages, it's still not a mathematical statement. It's rhetorical hyperbole. He's not saying that a 1% chance IS an absolute certainty, just that it must be treated as such because any chance is an intolerable risk.
His email's "where have you been?" is almost accusatory in a "we could have used you two years ago" way.
So his decision is completely arbitrary? If some dude has the power to destroy Earth, and there is even a 1% chance he might do it, then it has to be taken as a certainty and he must be killed.Because they don't have the godlike power to end life on Earth? Well, maybe some of them do, but they won't end up in the movies.
So his decision is completely arbitrary? If some dude has the power to destroy Earth, and there is even a 1% chance he might do it, then it has to be taken as a certainty and he must be killed.
If there's a 1% chance that one of his villains will murder innocent people, then don't worry about it?
That might work if we were talking about a Batman who agonizes over killing, but he doesn't. Not even a little bit. So why is The Joker still alive?
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