So do I, but it's making this thread a very disjointed read. I gather that some know-nothing keeps obliterating any reasonable and worthwhile discussion, but I haven't the foggiest who...I love the ignore feature

So do I, but it's making this thread a very disjointed read. I gather that some know-nothing keeps obliterating any reasonable and worthwhile discussion, but I haven't the foggiest who...I love the ignore feature
What part of the movie is that in? Not arguing, I just can't recall.Except for when Kayla was in Logan's memories in The Wolverine
Well that "I'm done talking about this movie" didn't last, huh?
Kirk, this is very true.Until you actually see the movie, this is not a factual statement.
Kirk, this is very true.
You can say I doubt I'll like it. You can say I'll probably hate it, but until you see it, however close minded you are, you don't know.
I expected from what I knew about Batman vs Superman (especially as I'm not very fond of DC) to hate it. Although it had major problems, I still enjoyed it. I do find it somewhat odd that you appear to make a habit of judging things before you've seen them...
Another random question about The Wolverine I wondered, how did Logan even remember Yashida and the events of Nagasaki? (when he lost his memories from the adamantium bullet in Origins)
Is this just one of the various unanswered XCU plot points, or did Xavier partially given him back some memories in X1 or 2? (been a while since I've watched either of those.)
If not that's what I'd assume anyway, like how I suppose Magneto somehow gave him his adamantium claws back in between The Wolverine and DOFP
What part of the movie is that in? Not arguing, I just can't recall.
kirk55555 said:I figured that the mute (almost certainly diminished intelligence) version of Sabertooth would be fairly obvious as the reason X1 and Origins don't work together.
I wonder some times if James Bond fans get into these arguments. I mean with all those films ostensibly about the same character, yet there's multiple different versions over the years, some of which seems to share cast members a seemingly some disjointed continuity too.
I thought the general view was that all the series films, pre-Craig, all had the same character, just on a sliding timescale.
^ I remember when I saw Origins at the cinema, I was expecing there to be a scene near the climax where Victor says to Stryker "I need to be stronger than him" or something, and Stryker like gets out this untested syrum and injects Victor with it, which mutates him more monsterous looking but also makes him less intelligent. Or whatever, something like that.
... But that didn't happen, and instead we got "Deadpool."
Hmm...
This kind of mental gymnastics just baffles me. I mean why bother when even the people making the movies don't seem to care all that much.I thought the general view was that all the series films, pre-Craig, all had the same character, just on a sliding timescale. The interactions with Q I think make more sense and are more enjoyable that way.
This kind of mental gymnastics just baffles me. I mean why bother when even the people making the movies don't seem to care all that much.
The notion that "the people making the movies don't seem to care all that much" when it comes to the pre-Craig Bond films and continuity is disproven by the fact that we see several different references to previous adventures/specific incidents interspersed across the breadth of the 20 pre-Craig Bond movies, from Roger Moore's Bond visiting Tracy's grave to a tiny mention of Timothy Dalton's Bond having been previous married to Judi Dench's M referencing Pierce Brosnan's Bond being a "Cold War Dinosaur".
I don't remember exactly how it went, but theory I heard about Mad Max was that Max is a mythical figure in the wasteland and that the movies are basically just stories people have told about "Max" and not necessarily real events.I'd call that a win-win on both counts!
This kind of mental gymnastics just baffles me. I mean why bother when even the people making the movies don't seem to care all that much.
Same goes for the likes of the Mad Max movies, which have less and less to do with the original with each new instalment. As with Bond, the draw in the character and (in a broad sense) the character in which he inhabits.
This is pretty much how I view the X-Men movies. I'm more invested in the characters and the world than I am in the minutia of timelines, cameos and minor plot points. Indeed I think this was why 'Logan' included that bit about the comic book. There are many stories of the X-Men and which ones are "true" and which are not depends on whether or not it matters to a given movie. It's subjective, just like what James Bond looked like or whether the tales attributed to "Mad Max" even refer to the same man.
You wrote the words "all that much", but you don't seem to have taken them to heart. A throwaway line here or there indeed doesn't constitute caring "all that much."The notion that "the people making the movies don't seem to care all that much" when it comes to the pre-Craig Bond films and continuity is disproven by the fact that we see several different references
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