You are the only person saying that,
all as part of your transparent, rattled-nerve attack on present era DC movies--many being far superior to MCU entries.
No, they are not, hence the reason a majority of the Bond films (particularly Connery - Dalton) have little to nothing to do with others.
A TV series is designed to be serialized, so again,
DC did not need 200 films to make great individual films payoff.
That's the inherent weakness of a film series (the MCU) that rarely develops its individual components as they should have been, instead leaning heavily on wafer-thin Easter eggs and set-ups for the next film.
Not even close.
Translation: you're still incredibly bitter that a DC movie was one of the most celebrated films of the year
YOU are the one making a completely unsubstantiated claim
Key: your assumption is that the Academy had a preference to give him an award for Brokeback Mountain,
which is another of saying you think the voters had some sort of gay agenda, otherwise his performance was not deserving of recognition. A double slap.
But if you notice, the better individual films either lean in one direction or the other: The Winter Soldier did not season itself with guffaw-inducing moments/scenes as the film moved from one intense and/or solemn development to another.
Batman Begins
, The Dark Knight, Dawn of Justice, Joker or The Incredible Hulk ('08) all played it straight and seriously because their nature demanded it.
There are few superhero stories or characters that lend themselves to being comical or laced with light humor and still achieve the dramatic/emotional punch of the aforementioned films.
Only a subset, almost all confined to a few genres, are “designed” to be “serialized.” The majority of films are conceived as stand alone stories and rightfully so.And so are modern movies.
Sky Atlantic gets first showing of most HBO shows now.I wonder where the Snyder Cut Will be in the UK? I vote Prime
Only a subset, almost all confined to a few genres, are “designed” to be “serialized.” The majority of films are conceived as stand alone stories and rightfully so.
"Rightfully"? Get off the high horse man, there's no Cinema law that states film must be composed of standalones.
And there is no cinema law that states standalones "lack ambition" as asserted above."Rightfully"? Get off the high horse man, there's no Cinema law that states film must be composed of standalones.
Then you don't knpw Cinema history because serialized storytelling has been a part of it going back to the beginning in the 1920ies - and feature films (as well as outright Cinema serials) were a big part of worldwide film-making and have been through the 1930ies, 40ies, 50ies, 60ies, 70ies, 80ies on to today. It's NOTHING NEW.tl:dr Not everything needs to be a franchise and insisting it must is causing more harm than good to filmmaking in my opinion.
That was not my implication. I am quite aware that there is both styles. My argument is that insisting one vs. the other is somehow preferred is not beneficial to filmmaking.Then you don't knpw Cinema history because serialized storytelling has been a part of it going back to the beginning in the 1920ies - and feature films (as well as outright Cinema serials) were a big part of worldwide film-making and have been through the 1930ies, 40ies, 50ies, 60ies, 70ies, 80ies on to today. It's NOTHING NEW.
There's absolutely nothing wrong with preferring standalone films at all - but to somehow imply the current form of Cinema serial storytelling today is somehow different just shows you really don't know much about the history of Cinema worldwide.
Not “rightfully” as in “all must be” but “rightfully” as in most films are self contained stories
There is nothing wrong with serialized films (nor have I ever said otherwise).
But to suggest that “modern movies” are, as a default, designed to be serialized (as you did above), is factually incorrect.
Personally, I'd say that standalone films are more ambitious since they are trying to do everything in one go, rather than spreading things out through multiple movies.And there is no cinema law that states standalones "lack ambition" as asserted above.
Personally, I'd say that standalone films are more ambitious since they are trying to do everything in one go, rather than spreading things out through multiple movies.
I vote Kelvin.I wonder where the Snyder Cut Will be in the UK? I vote Prime
Only a subset, almost all confined to a few genres, are “designed” to be “serialized.” The majority of films are conceived as stand alone stories and rightfully so.
Then you don't knpw Cinema history because serialized storytelling has been a part of it going back to the beginning in the 1920ies - and feature films (as well as outright Cinema serials) were a big part of worldwide film-making and have been through the 1930ies, 40ies, 50ies, 60ies, 70ies, 80ies on to today. It's NOTHING NEW.
There's absolutely nothing wrong with preferring standalone films at all - but to somehow imply the current form of Cinema serial storytelling today is somehow different just shows you really don't know much about the history of Cinema worldwide.
Folks are more willing to admit that Superman II had problems, and everyone's feelings on SM3, 4, Returns and MOS have been very clear. There's only one movie we all agree was truly good.
But they don't act like no prior stories ever happened to him. Especially the more serialized Craig movies.
Neither did MCU
Inf act, you've never once given an example of a "thin" plot in MCU.
Not bitter
It's hardly just me.
It did, actually.
There is no "we". As with so many subjects, you only speak for yourself
Barely referencing the events of other films
Bond visits Tracy's grave in the prologue of For Your Eyes Only, but it has no bearing on the rest of the film at all
Of course they do. Most MCU films are paper thin and cannot stand alone
Remove one, and it threatens to cause it fall apart..
Suuure.
Translation: two of the greatest superhero films ever made must be torn down (well, a failed attempt) because they took the superhero film to a rare height not matched by the majority of the cartoonish MCU.
No sale. Your every post abuot DC movies are filled with bitter screamng about them as their existence of doing it another way (often better) burns you up. This is a regular "feature" with you
Yes, its just you.
Your clear-as-day homophobia and hatred of DC movies led you to concoct a completely false story of how the
Academy wanted to give Ledger the Oscar for Brokeback Mountain.
The only reason you are saying this is your accusation that the Academy has a gay agenda
Try as you will (and that goes nowhere) you will use that to attempt to rob Ledger of his legitimately awarded performance as that DC character, the Joker--again, something the MCU will never match, even if it cranks out another 200 films.
No, it did not. The Winter Soldier was a tight, serious film that was free of the constant "Stark-ism" jokes
You are never going to rewrite that film and why its the far and away greatest MCU film. Its the only truly great MCU film.
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