I think Mach5 was referring to Tron: Legacy there, not to John Carter.I disagree about it being a music video. The shots were held a lot longer than in most movies these days. It gets a little jumpy in some of the action scenes, but not too much.
I think Mach5 was referring to Tron: Legacy there, not to John Carter.I disagree about it being a music video. The shots were held a lot longer than in most movies these days. It gets a little jumpy in some of the action scenes, but not too much.
It's no more a 2-hour music video than any other film that has a soundtrack scored by anyone not John Williams.Bummer. I enjoyed this 2-hour music video more than I ever thought I would.I think that has less to do with Disney and more to do with the people involed in making Tron: Legacy (namely the writers and director) being tied up with other projects. Actual filming may not begin until 2014, IIRC.
I think a sequel is all but officially confirmed--a new screenwriter was hired when the original writers for Legacy dropped out to do Once Upon A Time. I don't think we'll hear the official word until there's a script that meets Disney's approval and the director is free from his current projects.I'd really like to see a sequel.
I'm not sure what you're saying here, but I might as well clarify what I meant. Tron: Legacy is a movie with a very simple, linear plot which requires 0 mental effort, striking visuals, great, beautifully choreographed action sequences and amazing score by Daft Punk which I've listened through more times than I can count.It's no more a 2-hour music video than any other film that has a soundtrack scored by anyone not John Williams.
Tron: Legacy is a movie with a very simple, linear plot which requires 0 mental effort, striking visuals, great, beautifully choreographed action sequences and amazing score by Daft Punk which I've listened through more times than I can count.
Agreed completely.Sometimes simple and linear plots are a good thing.
It still has more layers than Legacy, though. Not that Legacy doesn't work, BTW. It really does.ANH has one of the most linear plots around and works because of it.
Which ones do you mean?Many Sci-Fi movies these days fall apart since they try to be too complex and end up becoming a bloated mess.
a 300 screen limited release that’s just the sort of film that would have been a wide release/mainstream picture just a few years ago.
the film debuted with just $30.6 million.
The film did an uncommonly large 64% of its business via its 3D screens, plus 16% from IMAX.
Years from now, marketing schools will teach John Carter as an example of where the Disney team did everything wrong, at least in America.
the film contains one of the most fleshed out and interesting female-leads in recent fantasy film history, but the marketing campaign sold Lynn Collins as damsel-in-distress boy-bait who throws a girl-power punch or two in the action.
I read the book immediately before seeing the film. I really liked the movie, but it was a bit... overdrawn in places, with the invented character melodrama and so on. Still, it was visually spectacular and looked like it cost $250 million to make... which it did, apparently! The CGI looks absolutely realistic and physically solid, particularly the Green Martians. Extremely impressive.
I think if they had cut the running time down a bit, and maybe get to Mars a little sooner, it might have found more mainstream success.
Having only read the first novel... are the holy men / angel stuff from a later book, I presume?
It's also nonsense. It's not at all confusing unless someone assumes audiences are generally idiots.I've read many reviews about John Carter saying how confusing it is at times with all the alien culture and many characters. That might have turned off some of the audience.
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