They market Aliens, Walking Dead, Predator, among others to kids. I would find Game of Thrones Lego-style alongside other kid toys. The why is simply money.have to admit, I'm honestly a little confused by why they still market superhero stuff to kids.
Of course, just one person's opinion, but nice to hear.They figured it out and cut the feed but I can say the first hour or so of the Snyder cut is the best DC film I've ever seen.
- Doug (@ThenDougSaid) March 8, 2021
Yeah... Glitch....It's fixed now, but a glitch happened on HBO Max today where people clicking on Tom & Jerry got the SnyderCut instead.
Whoops!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/ne...ly-leaks-on-hbo-max/ar-BB1enUEN?ocid=msedgdhp
It's also not a new thing. Back in the 80s and 90s, they promoted a lot of R-rated properties to kids, including Saturday morning cartoons for Rambo, RoboCop, Police Academy, Conan, and the jim Carrey trifecta of Ace Ventura, The Mask, and Dumb & Dumber.They market Aliens, Walking Dead, Predator, among others to kids. I would find Game of Thrones Lego-style alongside other kid toys. The why is simply money.
When was the last movie with flawless CGI? Since Black Panther things seem to have taken a noticeable step down. Did the artists get some human rights or something?The CGI looks pretty awful
I suspect more of the opposite. Artists being tasked with far more than they can pull off on the time and budget they’re given. I’m a 3d artist and I’ve handed over work I’m not proud of because there just wasn’t the time or money to polish it as much as I’d like.When was the last movie with flawless CGI? Since Black Panther things seem to have taken a noticeable step down. Did the artists get some human rights or something?
I suspect more of the opposite. Artists being tasked with far more than they can pull off on the time and budget they’re given. I’m a 3d artist and I’ve handed over work I’m not proud of because there just wasn’t the time or money to polish it as much as I’d like.
Movies these days have so many effects shots that it’s kind of insane. Jurassic Park had around 60, given the Snyder Cut’s runtime my guess is that it has around 2000.
The point of MoS and BvS is that he's not a savior, or daddy--but thanks to his alien genetics, he tries to help, and knowing who God is, would never promote himself as a God figure. Unfortunately in universe--as BvS illustrates, some of the population falsely elevated him to God-like status, which enraged a man (Luthor) who had such spitting resentment at God and the alien some just worshiped as if he was that, as opposed to Luthor himself, who sold himself on the idea that a rich "tech genius" should be what all invest their hopes and dreams into--ironically lifting him up for the kind of praise he resents for Superman. Snyder placed Superman in a world based on how real humans would see and treat an alien, and its not George Reeves.
Criminals and psychopaths have always fascinated audiences; in The Silence of the Lambs, I would say the majority of the audience were far more interested in Lecter alone than his interactions with Clarice Starling. The same with Alex DeLarge from A Clockwork Orange or Norman Bates from Psycho. Seeing how a criminal and/or evil personality operates holds a strong curiosity for some and intense interest for others--both able to glimpse into a life best experienced within the safety of of film.
Look at films like Pirates of the Caribbean, celebrating a lifestyle of debauchery, drunkenness and immorality or Fast and the Furious celebrating fighting against the law. Does that mean that society is morally failing?
I haven't seen Joker yet, but I've read a fair number of folks who view the film as a warning about the undesirable consequences of economic inequality and the lack of a social safety net. I think there's artistic and moral value in studying evil through art, and particularly in studying how society functions in ways that are evil and thereby reproduces other evils it hypocritically condemns. I don't think any of that is the same thing as celebrating or endorsing evil per se.
I'd always grab Wonder Woman.
It's also not a new thing. Back in the 80s and 90s, they promoted a lot of R-rated properties to kids, including Saturday morning cartoons for Rambo, RoboCop, Police Academy, Conan, and the Jim Carrey trifecta of Ace Ventura, The Mask, and Dumb & Dumber.
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