Possibly this is just BS Waller is peddling to further her agenda?I'm curious about one thing...in the trailer, Waller talks about Superman and what they can do if things go bad again. How is this team supposed to handle something like that anyway?
Correction, a totalitarian government.I guess that's what it's like to live under a communist governement.
So if a real big bad turns up then the One Much Greater Power will handle it while Boomerang and Harley hide behind a car?They aren't all street level villains. A few are low level super powered, and one is much greater.
Meaning...what, exactly? I can't ask a question about the logic of the film? I indeed don't read Suicide Squad and I was curious. Most of the people paying to see the movie don't read the comic either.If you read the comics that shouldn't be a surprise.
What's most disappointing to me regarding Suicide Squad now is how WB seemingly didn't have faith in Ayer and set out to make a version of the movie that they thought would bring them more money.
David Ayer said:this cut of the movie is my cut, there’s no sort of parallel universe version of the movie, the released movie is my cut
I guess that's what it's like to live under a communist governement.
I'm curious about one thing...in the trailer, Waller talks about Superman and what they can do if things go bad again. How is this team supposed to handle something like that anyway? Harley with a baseball bat, the rest with guns, one has fire...these guys can't even take out Batman, so what luck would they have against a Superman-level threat?
Plus, the villains in this movie practically were Superman-level threats (magic being something Supes does have trouble with). The 'normals' in the Squad managed to deal with the situation just fine by using a bomb, a sword, and some quick thinking.
Sure, but that raises the question, why not recruit the Flash or Wonder Woman to deal with the threat, if it's the same kind of threat they would deal with anyway? What's the point of forming such a different kind of team if they go up against the same kind of enemy? It's not about whether they can beat that type of foe, it's about why you'd choose them to do it instead of someone else. Or rather, why the filmmakers charged with making a movie about such a different kind of team would just fall back on a conventional type of superhero-movie threat instead of choosing a more distinctive type of threat that was better suited to the Dirty Dozen premise.
I looked into this more and it seems to be a dispute over the distribution deal between Cinemex and Universal Pictures. Universal Pictures being the local distributors for the movie. So, it's about business and not censored content, like with China.Looks like Mexico chains are pulling the movie
http://entertainment.ie/cinema/news...-of-behind-the-scenes-panic-emerge/383825.htm
I went from not really caring about seeing this movie as DC has burned me on all their movies so far, to kind of wanting to see it after seeing the trailers. Now after reading the reviews I'm back to not caring to see it again. It's a rental for me.
The general audience are not the people who rush out to see the movie opening night or even opening weekend. The vast majority of people who went to the showings last night are hardcore comic book fans who liked Man of Steel and BvS. Of course those people liked the film.And yet the general audiences so far seem to like it.
Studio interference is as old as time; it's very rarely absent. And if the movie does well, the studio will conclude it interfered just the right amount, and if it doesn't, they'll conclude it was a bad idea/script in the first place.IAt this point we have to cling to two hopes:
[...]
2. The studio has LEARNT IT'S F***ING LESSON.
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