Second best CGI rendered Dragon I've seen. The first was in "Voyage of the Dawn Treader".
There's also the fact that some people, when in bad situations of their own making, will often fantasize the world around them to make things seem more glamorous, or make themselves more sympathetic. That's how I read Baby Doll's brothel fantasy. She didn't "take control" of her reality until she descended even further into the action-fantasy.
I'm amused by reviewers who are essentially saying that they didn't get any kind of sense of fun or enthusiasm from Zack in this movie. I dare say that they didn't understand or pay attention to what the film was about or have read any of his interviews. This was his first original theatrical film and a project that he was extremely passionate about. I think this comes out in spades during the film.
It seems to me that you went into the movie determined to hate it and you did.
Now, if the action sequences had some specific, symbolic significance to the film's theme of empowerment I might be interested. But I'll be honest and say I didn't even pay attention to what was happening until the 'splosions were over.
I don't think you're wrong in seeing the brothel as an "off the wall removed from reality" vision. But I've known people -- and if I'm brutally honest, there have times I've been guilty of this myself -- where the fantasy isn't so much romanticized escapism as it is a glorified version of perceived oppression. So there are circumstances whereby Baby Doll's transference of the asylum to a brothel -- a situation where her abilities afford her some semblance of not merely control, but acceptance and glamor -- actually do hold water.I guess maybe if the brothel world were a little more grounded in any sort of reality maybe this explanation would work better, but the brothel fantasy was so off the wall removed from reality that it seemed much more than just an augmented reality.
Reading reviews is almost always a mistake. They all too often praise what I hate and decry what I wind up liking.Well, believe it or not I was really excited about this until I saw the reviews and heard about it.
Reading reviews is almost always a mistake. They all too often praise what I hate and decry what I wind up liking.Well, believe it or not I was really excited about this until I saw the reviews and heard about it.
It seems to have been made for 15-year-old boys by a sad middle-aged man whose only experience of life is from violent comics, shoot-'em-up video games and online pornography. - Christopher Tookey
Proves that while masturbating over your cast may not make you blind, it can impair directorial vision. - Catherine Bray
Agreed. It was the combination of elements: the sweeping landscapes, steampunk tech, miitary action combined with some really nice weapon/fighting work.The best action sequence in my opinion was the World War II/Steampunk Nazi's. I also think that was the most video game-esque part of the movie. Especially with Amber's mech.
What did impress me was that while Snyder gave them little to wear, he didn’t shoot these young women in an exploitative way. I had heard accusations – “masturbatory” was a word thrown around a lot – that he had, so I did the pervy thing. I focused on the T&A and looked up Baby Doll’s skirt. Does he zoom up it? Does it fly up? Does the camera linger on her boobs? On anyone’s boobs? Any crotch shots? Any arched backs and porn expressions? No. It was not the feeling I experienced during Sin City, Tomb Raider, The Spirit, Charlie’s Angels, or the Megan Fox snippets of Transformers. There are directors who shoot as if they are fondling their actresses. The camera becomes very penetrative. As a woman, it has made me feel uncomfortable. Sucker Punch was a rare exception to that. I admired them, I thought they looked good, but I didn’t feel as if I’d just visited Fleshbot.
Easy fix: the action sequences are hallucinations resulting from the forced application of an experimental drug, and - cribbing from The Matrix here, natch - if the girls die during these reveries, they die in the real world. Heck, because of the whole "unexplained drugs" thing, you could even have several of them sharing the dream; the important thing would be to actually lose one of the girls at one point. That way, the action sequences become important, and you could still have the girls imagining the real world as a brothel so long as you made it clear that that was a deliberate game they played.Now, if the action sequences had some specific, symbolic significance to the film's theme of empowerment I might be interested. But I'll be honest and say I didn't even pay attention to what was happening until the 'splosions were over.
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