Argh! By far. He's not just a realyl bad director, he's plain moron.Uwe Boll is definitely the worst.
Argh! By far. He's not just a realyl bad director, he's plain moron.Uwe Boll is definitely the worst.
Just for that, you get a gold star for the day....there are so many other finer films out there for viewing such as: ... Bridge on the River Kwai...
I thought Armageddon was superb. With a much better soundtrack than Star Trek to boot.
Superb!!! Superb??
I'm sorry that you think Armageddon was superb...really I am because in reality there is no way this film should be considered anywhere near superb...and by you thinking that it is saddens me because there are so many other finer films out there for viewing such as: Sunset Blvd, Bridge on the River Kwai, Witness for the Prosecution, How green was my valley, Judgement at Nurenburg(sp), Long Day's Journey into Night, the Night of the Hunter, How the West was won....I'll stop now because the list never ends...but Damn do I love me some night of the hunter!!!
Even Star Trek XI had enough issues for me to think that these people are getting lucky... The dialog was over expository. The actors did a good job expressing their characters as they will.... Do we need Spock to SAY he's emotionally compromised AFTER a fist fight on the bridge? All he should say is he steps down.Are you implying that Orci and Kurtzman are actually Genuis, and that because we like the new Trek film we automatically think Abrams is a good director? For Christ's sake LENSE FLARE. God, drove me up the wall.
Abrams produced that cinematic Abortion that was Cloverfield, directed Mission Impossible 3 (just when I thought it couldn't get worse than Mission Impossible 2), and gave us TV crap like Lost, Alias, and Felicity.
Orci and Kurtzman gave us Transformers, and not even Star Trek XI has me able to forgive them.
Yeah by no means do I think this Abrams guy is a genius or master film maker...same goes for the other two...Orci & Kurtzman. I mean when you see a really well written film then you can fully appreciate it and realize that these guys ain't it.
If that's how you define a great career, I guess he's "successful." We can be damn sure nobody is going to watching or talking about his movies after he's dead, though....or even 20 years from now, maybe less.Worst careers you say? Is that why he has a bank account of $200 million?He is an awful director making formulaic crap, with one of the worst careers in Hollywood...
^You are wrong. Generation Y will make sure of that. People born in the 80s and 90s will see Bay, Abrams, Orci and Kurtzman as some of the best in business.
Even Shakespeare was a commercial success during his life time.
Why Do Trekkies Bash Michael Bay?
Because Transformers was awful
He helped them to hone their skills on "The Island" and "Transformers".
^You are wrong. Generation Y will make sure of that. People born in the 80s and 90s will see Bay, Abrams, Orci and Kurtzman as some of the best in business.
Even Shakespeare was a commercial success during his life time.
Abrams is already >>> Bay
And no, people born in that era see Arnofsky, Del Toro, Fincher, Thomas Anderson and The Coen Brothers as the best in the business.
Point is, the script wasn't nearly as polished as it should have been, and it's the best thing that Kurtzman and Orci wrote. I think them and Abrams had little to do with the success of this film. The Production Design team is made up of the unsung heroes of this film, and the superb cast managed to go above and beyond the call of Duty.
Michael Bay is so original!
Plot similarities with Parts: The Clonus Horror
The following are plot points which accurately describe both movies.
- There is a secret community of clones who are being created so that their organs can eventually be harvested in order to extend the lives of people, living outside of the community, wealthy enough to afford the process.
- When it is time for a clone (or more precisely, his or her organs), the clone is led to believe that he or she has been "randomly" chosen to go to what has been advertised as a utopia. The utopia, which of course does not really exist, is "America" in Clonus, and "The Island" in The Island.
- The community of clones is closely monitored by video surveillance and uniformed guards, who closely observe the actions of the clones.
- The main character is an inquisitive clone living in the community who finds clues about the outside world.
- The main character eventually escapes the community.
- A woman, which the community staff try to keep the main character from getting too close to, becomes the love interest for the protagonist, urging the protagonist to return to the facility after escaping.
- The project director sends assassins after the character.
- The main character gets betrayed by a genetic parent/sponsor he seeks and contacts in the outside world.
- The President (candidate for President in Clonus) is known to have a clone.
- The cloning program is exposed at the end of the film.
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