At best maybe someone who saw it could just tell us what it was about.So, something I was thinking - since they did a test release of Batgirl, that means a functional work print DOES exist, somewhere. Anonymous hackers - get on it!
At best maybe someone who saw it could just tell us what it was about.So, something I was thinking - since they did a test release of Batgirl, that means a functional work print DOES exist, somewhere. Anonymous hackers - get on it!
It's not fraud because the tax law allows it.
As for the rest, nobody here knows the inner workings of Zaslav's mind.
Honestly, it's a pretty viable theory. It's exceedingly common for incoming Execs to kill a previous regimes projects - or sabotage them like Disney Execs are suspected to have done to some Fox projects that were already in the pipeline.
It's expensive. That's why.
Walter Hamada is on his way out of DC Films in the next couple of months. Expect gloating tweets from Ray Fisher soon.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/dc-films-walter-hamada-exit-batgirl-1235193439/
[FONT=TwitterChirp][/FONT]Walter Hamada feigning outrage and pretending to quit a job he knows he’s being replaced at is quite a vibe.
Yeah, my mom and I got to see a couple of test screenings for a couple of animated movies a few years ago, and they still had quite a few scenes that were rough animation or even just roughly sketched storyboards. I know one was Shrek 2, because there were a couple of teenage girls behind us who, based on some comments we overheard, completely missed the entire point of the movie.I had a similar experience - Saw an early test screening of the movie "Alive" with temp music, no looped dialogue etc. Afterwards we were given a questionnaire about what we liked, didn't like etc. Saw the movie several months later during a regular screening and you could tell what had been fixed/altered.
I am fairly certain I heard the same audio interview on Twitter you did today. With a journalist who was a aware of the Batgirl situation before the New York Post broke the story. Hollywood as a whole was shocked by this action.Latest info is that another movie that tested at 61 percent was the much hyped black Adam.
That was canned because it was always intended to be canned. No taxes involved.Well I bought a videotape of the Roger Corman Fantastic Four movie at a small comic show in the 90s. When it was much harder to share media data. Things might happen.
Which has nothing to do with the fact that it leaked to the bootleg circle.That was canned because it was always intended to be canned. No taxes involved.
Don't worry, they're going to love all the unscripted content coming out.I know one was Shrek 2, because there were a couple of teenage girls behind us who, based on some comments we overheard, completely missed the entire point of the movie.
To counteract the narrative that it’s a bad movie.
Very much so. I can't fathom it.and show just where they stand ethically by advocating all manner of illegal action to obtain that which does not belong to them--all to fulfill their fan entitlement issues. Astounding.
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