Well, it's all a matter of how OVER-THE-TOP they get by the use of "shakeycam" work.JuanBolio said:
I dunno, Dale. Its certainly a different angle to take for a monster movie. I don't think anyone will be disappointed by the amount of screen time the monster gets. As for shaky-cam footage - its sucks of you're one of the people who get bothered by it. I'm happy not to be one of them.
I think the production values are irrelevant. They're shooting on digital, which vastly reduced the cost of the movie. You probably won't be able to tell the difference, effects-wise, between Cloverfield and a $150 million show.
I can't even imagine this. I saw The Bourne Supremacy in theaters and don't even remember any particularly shaky camera work. Being nauseated by it boggles my mind.Cary L. Brown said:
When I went to see "The Bourne Supremacy," six people in the theater actually threw up, and at least half of us (myself included) left the theater with headaches.
Not the first film (The Bourne Identity), or the most recent one (The Bourne Ultimatum). I'm talking about the second film. And if you can't remember the shakeycam work... you need to go back and watch the film again. It's pretty much impossible to miss. Pay particular attention during the driving sequences and the hand-to-hand-combat sequences.JuanBolio said:
I can't even imagine this. I saw The Bourne Supremacy in theaters and don't even remember any particularly shaky camera work. Being nauseated by it boggles my mind.Cary L. Brown said:
When I went to see "The Bourne Supremacy," six people in the theater actually threw up, and at least half of us (myself included) left the theater with headaches.
Cary L. Brown said:
When I went to see "The Bourne Supremacy," six people in the theater actually threw up, and at least half of us (myself included) left the theater with headaches.
JuanBolio said:
I can't even imagine this. I saw The Bourne Supremacy in theaters and don't even remember any particularly shaky camera work. Being nauseated by it boggles my mind.Cary L. Brown said:
When I went to see "The Bourne Supremacy," six people in the theater actually threw up, and at least half of us (myself included) left the theater with headaches.
Well, I didn't get physically ill... but I did have a headache after the flick. But it's hard to miss when you hear people puking several rows back...Jackson_Roykirk said:Sorry Cary, I'm with ancient - Bourne Supremecy's shaky cam couldn't be too bad, because I don't even remember it being shot that way. I never got physically ill in a movie theater, shaky cam or otherwise.
Well, that entire movie, almost without exception, left me feeling sick... I've blanked it out of my mind almost entirely. Somebody bought me the "complete Batman movie series" a couple of years ago and I've never even unwrapped that disk... it's still in celophane.However, I DID fall asleep during that ice-skating/fight scene in 'Batman and Robin'. Yeah - I know that scene was a the beginning of the film, but it was the 10 PM showing, AND that scene was exceptionally dreadful.
Cary L. Brown said:
I never liked ANY of that sequence of "Batman" movies. The first one was the least bad... but it represented a wasted opportunity. That's why I've been so ecstatic about how BEAUTIFULLY "Batman Begins" was done... it was everything that I've always thought of as "Batman" since I started reading the comics back in '72 when Denny O'Neil took the character back to his darker roots.
Yep... Nolen definitely was a fan of the COMIC BOOK version of the character. In fact, his movie was in very large part a synthesis of three of the most popular Batman comic stories of the past couple of decades:trevanian said:
Cary L. Brown said:
I never liked ANY of that sequence of "Batman" movies. The first one was the least bad... but it represented a wasted opportunity. That's why I've been so ecstatic about how BEAUTIFULLY "Batman Begins" was done... it was everything that I've always thought of as "Batman" since I started reading the comics back in '72 when Denny O'Neil took the character back to his darker roots.
That's very interesting. I don't remember ever reading the comics, and while I loved the TV show when I was 5 years old, none of the BATflicks were of too much interest to me either, till BEGINS, which I thought was absolutely fantastic. Pretty good sign to me, that BB can appeal so much to someone like you who knows the stuff as well as somebody like me who just likes seeing a movie that feels like it is about something and has some integrity in its presentation.
Cary L. Brown said:
Yep... Nolen definitely was a fan of the COMIC BOOK version of the character. In fact, his movie was in very large part a synthesis of three of the most popular Batman comic stories of the past couple of decades:trevanian said:
Cary L. Brown said:
I never liked ANY of that sequence of "Batman" movies. The first one was the least bad... but it represented a wasted opportunity. That's why I've been so ecstatic about how BEAUTIFULLY "Batman Begins" was done... it was everything that I've always thought of as "Batman" since I started reading the comics back in '72 when Denny O'Neil took the character back to his darker roots.
That's very interesting. I don't remember ever reading the comics, and while I loved the TV show when I was 5 years old, none of the BATflicks were of too much interest to me either, till BEGINS, which I thought was absolutely fantastic. Pretty good sign to me, that BB can appeal so much to someone like you who knows the stuff as well as somebody like me who just likes seeing a movie that feels like it is about something and has some integrity in its presentation.
"Batman: Year One"
"The Man Who Falls"
"The Long Halloween"
"Year One" involved Lieutentant Gordon as the only honest cop in the city of Gotham, introduced us to Commissioner Loeb, to the mob family that ran Gotham, etc... showed Wayne's first outing in disguise (but not yet in a bat-suit) as well as his first in a "ninja" style suit... showed us our first glimpse of "The East End" also known as "The Narrows"... and the list goes on. There were many scenes and sequences in this film lifted right off of the comic page... they even LOOKED the same (right down to the placement of shadows!)
"The Man Who Falls" told the story of young Bruce falling down the well... introduced the line about "Why do we fall? So we can learn to pick ourselves up"... introduced the idea that the adolescent Bruce dropped out of college and travelled the world.. introduced a Frenchman named Henri Ducard who was one of Bruce Wayne's teachers... introduced Bruce Wayne's early involvement training within the League of Shadows (prior to learning of Ra's Al Ghul's role as ultimate leader).
The main "new" element there was making Ducard INTO Ra's... something that was definitely not the case in the comics.
And "The Long Halloween" involved Dr. Crane, his role at Arkham, the flooding of Fear toxin into the water supply, the breaching of Arkham, the birth of The Scarecrow, etc, etc.
This last film was almost ENTIRELY a synthesis of those three stories. It was the most faithful-to-the-comics story ever seen in any other medium... and was the most serious as well. The really SICKENING bit, for years, is that the COMIC BOOKS were so dramatically more adult than the films were. The people making the films had no concern about the source material.
So, when they did "Batman Begins," they tossed out all the previous "non-canon" movies and gave us a movie that, FOR THE FIRST TIME, was consistent with the source material.
Now, Nolen is doing this movie as well... "The Dark Knight" (which was also the title of Frank Moore's seminal "future of Batman" story, wherein the Joker played a very prominent role... though ultimately the most significant adversary to Batman in this book was... Clark Kent). I fully expect them to lift bits from the Joker portion of "The Dark Knight," as well as from "The Killing Joke" (THE best Joker story of all time, as far as I'm concerned... and yes, the one in which he permanently crippled Barbara Gordon, leaving her in a wheelchair.)
This film has Harvey Dent in it... but no mention of him as "Two-face." This is a GOOD thing... for those of us who know the comics (Harvey was considered to be the most likely person in Gotham to be Batman for years, prior to his becoming scarred.) Yes, they had "Two-face" in a prior Bat-flick... but the way that role was played was HORRIFYINGLY BAD. And the sad thing is, I think Tommy Lee Jones COULD have played the character in a "real" way better than most actors in Hollywood might have. They played him "over the top" when in fact, Two-face is almost totally emotionless. He doesn't act in anger or fear or rage... he doesn't make decisions himself at all. He lets the coin make every decision in his life... and he's as likely to be a hero as a villain, depending on the flip of the coin.
I suspect that we'll get a third new-series Batflick, and that Harvey Dent will be the antagonist in that flick.
Oh,a nd I'm THRILLED with what little I've seen of Heath Ledger in the current one. I mean, I really didn't expect to like him in it, but I barely even SEE Ledger... apparently he's a better actor than I thought he was!![]()
Well, there's nothing in Batman "canon" that states that the suit is made out of spandex. There is PLENTY in Batman canon that states that the suit has thermal maintenance capabilities built in and is capable of blocking knife slashes and small-caliber handgun shots.MisterPL said:I gotta say I'm shocked that someone so vocal about maintaining Trek's "canon" (such as it is) has such no problem embracing Nolan's Bat-flick.
If you don't mind my asking, Cary L. Brown, what did you think of Bale's batsuit?
I hadn't heard that. I LOVE "The Prisoner" (as a former Military Intelligence guy myself, and someone who still spends an inordinate amount of my time analyzing what's going on in the world... I still love the only recurring #2's comment about his "dream" of "all the world as a Global Village"Nolan is supposed to be doing THE PRISONER soon, and I gotta say, he is one of the only creative forces I would trust with that (by way of comparison, the fact that Simon West was going to do it several years ago gave me a stomachache.) The fact Nolan has the TWELVE MONKEYS writers doing the script also suggests he is on the right track there, IMO.
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