^Then again, the same could be said for nearly every movie based upon a book.
Exacty! The whole point of the comic is that in this world Superheroes have no sense of grandeur. Other than Doc Manhattan they are just normal people in costumes. They are not cool, ass kicking badasses. They are actually pathetic. It should have had a simple naturalistic style. Its a character drama and mystery, not an action story. Nolan would have been better suited for it.
They are not cool, ass kicking badasses.
davejames said:It just seemed to completely miss the point of the book.
^Then again, the same could be said for nearly every movie based upon a book.
Not really. At least not good movies based on books. An effective adaptation realizes that books and movies are different media and knows what to leave out and what to keep.
That's...uh...some interesting dialogue there. Maybe it'll work better on screen than on paper.
It always does. Always.
No.
It always does. Always.
No.
Yes.
I've never seen an actor who couldn't make a lame bit of dialogue at least a little better than it reads on the page.
^ Once again I agree with Broc.
Maybe the "no emotions" line is supposed to be read as sarcasm? It could work that way.
Generally speaking, a script would indicate that.
Generally speaking, a script would indicate that.
Generally speaking? No. Some writers insert a lot of parentheticals into their dialogue but the practice is not really loved by directors or actors so most use them very sparingly. If delivery isn't indicated by context then it's pretty much open.
^ It also has to do with you being right![]()
Thus is the problem with fanboys. If Snyder took more liberties with the source material to streamline the comic into a workable movie, then NERDRAGE would happen. Snyder, instead, went to great lengths to make it as faithful as possible (especially with the extended cut [and the extended cut of the extended cut]) and what did he get? NERDRAGE! He was never going to win.
This is why nerds are the worst audience. Fuck nerds.
Fuck nerds.
Generally speaking, a script would indicate that.
Generally speaking? No. Some writers insert a lot of parentheticals into their dialogue but the practice is not really loved by directors or actors so most use them very sparingly. If delivery isn't indicated by context then it's pretty much open.
Generally speaking, a script would indicate that.
Generally speaking? No. Some writers insert a lot of parentheticals into their dialogue but the practice is not really loved by directors or actors so most use them very sparingly. If delivery isn't indicated by context then it's pretty much open.
Why isn't the practice loved?
This is why nerds are the worst audience. Fuck nerds.
Pretty much agree here, hardcore fans of the source material cannot support film franchises you need a wider base but you need to strike a balance like Nolan did (BB & TDK).
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