They seem to be leaning pretty hard on Chris Pine. They're showing him talk a lot in the trailers and he's got the best lines.
They haven't shown Gal Gadot speak as much. I have a hunch that Chris Pine is a much better actor than Gal Gadot.
While that's true it's wise for the movie to surround her with accomplished actors to cover her weak spots. That said, it's still a big gamble since this is her first lead role.
The few brief seconds where there was no blue filter smeared all over it visually looked quite good. I have a feeling this is going to be yet another DC movie where everyone says "There was potential there, but then they let Zach Snyder near it." I'm also rather worried that Chris Pine is going to overshadow Gadot, and not because he's stealing the scenes but just because Gadot is not that good.
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That_GuyI don't wanna be that guyRegistered Userregular
Yeah, at last the trailer had colors. I was almost shocked when I saw the trailer and it wasn't a hundred different shades of dark blue and black.
The new reliance on flashbacks is hilarious. And not surprising in the least. This is what results when you try to build the foundation after you already built the penthouse. I guess the nicest thing to say is that at least they realize they have to address said foundation. But good god this is going to be a train wreck.
Meanwhile Marvel can do effectively the same thing with just 2 lines of dialog.
Ant-Man: Hey, about last time...
Falcon: It was a great audition, and it'll never happen again.
And they can get away with it because you know exactly what that refers to if you saw Ant-Man. No need at all to force a flashback that would otherwise kill the narrative.
"The sausage of Green Earth explodes with flavor like the cannon of culinary delight."
The new reliance on flashbacks is hilarious. And not surprising in the least. This is what results when you try to build the foundation after you already built the penthouse. I guess the nicest thing to say is that at least they realize they have to address said foundation. But good god this is going to be a train wreck.
With their flash forwards (how does this work?) they'd be having a very difficult task ahead of themselves under the best of circumstances. It'd be a big job if Marvel did it, with DC/WB it's destined to be a disaster because they're not very good at this stuff. They have no institutional memory to get it right, they'd need someone like Christopher Nolan to do the heavy lifting on that and he's noped out pretty quick post-Dark Knight saga.
The new reliance on flashbacks is hilarious. And not surprising in the least. This is what results when you try to build the foundation after you already built the penthouse. I guess the nicest thing to say is that at least they realize they have to address said foundation. But good god this is going to be a train wreck.
With their flash forwards (how does this work?) they'd be having a very difficult task ahead of themselves under the best of circumstances. It'd be a big job if Marvel did it, with DC/WB it's destined to be a disaster because they're not very good at this stuff. They have no institutional memory to get it right, they'd need someone like Christopher Nolan to do the heavy lifting on that and he's noped out pretty quick post-Dark Knight saga.
Nolan couldn't even manage a competent third film in his own trilogy, I don't see him as someone to usher in a series of films about different characters.
The new reliance on flashbacks is hilarious. And not surprising in the least. This is what results when you try to build the foundation after you already built the penthouse. I guess the nicest thing to say is that at least they realize they have to address said foundation. But good god this is going to be a train wreck.
With their flash forwards (how does this work?) they'd be having a very difficult task ahead of themselves under the best of circumstances. It'd be a big job if Marvel did it, with DC/WB it's destined to be a disaster because they're not very good at this stuff. They have no institutional memory to get it right, they'd need someone like Christopher Nolan to do the heavy lifting on that and he's noped out pretty quick post-Dark Knight saga.
Nolan couldn't even manage a competent third film in his own trilogy, I don't see him as someone to usher in a series of films about different characters.
His first two films were excellent, and he's got a skill level higher than what DC has access to. He also has his brother, Jonathan Nolan, and when they worked together they made TDK and by himself he's made Person of Interest, the short story Momento was based on, and Westworld.
The real issue with the DCEU is that they don't have their own Feige, that is someone who both knows how to put the pieces in place to make make a good film AND loves the DC universe that he's working with. That's really been the MCU's key, Marvel found the guy with the right mix of movie skill and comic love and Disney kept giving that guy more power to do things the right way.
They seem to be leaning pretty hard on Chris Pine. They're showing him talk a lot in the trailers and he's got the best lines.
They haven't shown Gal Gadot speak as much. I have a hunch that Chris Pine is a much better actor than Gal Gadot.
While that's true it's wise for the movie to surround her with accomplished actors to cover her weak spots. That said, it's still a big gamble since this is her first lead role.
On the other hand, you need actors that are not too much better (or can act that way), or else they won't shore up the weak spots--they'll highlight them.
The real issue with the DCEU is that they don't have their own Feige, that is someone who both knows how to put the pieces in place to make make a good film AND loves the DC universe that he's working with. That's really been the MCU's key, Marvel found the guy with the right mix of movie skill and comic love and Disney kept giving that guy more power to do things the right way.
Beyond that though, is the simple inability to grasp basic film making; SS's incompetence went beyond simply poor characterization and into the fundamentals including
The real issue with the DCEU is that they don't have their own Feige, that is someone who both knows how to put the pieces in place to make make a good film AND loves the DC universe that he's working with. That's really been the MCU's key, Marvel found the guy with the right mix of movie skill and comic love and Disney kept giving that guy more power to do things the right way.
Beyond that though, is the simple inability to grasp basic film making; SS's incompetence went beyond simply poor characterization and into the fundamentals including
When they're on their game they're insightful. Watch their Star Wars prequel reviews.
Rape jokes annoy me, and lack of self awareness doubly so. So no, I think I'll examine analysis of people who know what the fuck they're talking about, and aren't douchebags. It's like if you had said that analyzing films was the FCH approach.
When they're on their game they're insightful. Watch their Star Wars prequel reviews.
Rape jokes annoy me, and lack of self awareness doubly so. So no, I think I'll examine analysis of people who know what the fuck they're talking about, and aren't douchebags. It's like if you had said that analyzing films was the FCH approach.
They do know what they're talking about, but I do agree the narrative/persona surrounding it can be irritating.
Yeah, the Plinkette reviews aren't exactly for everyone, but to dismiss them out of hand if you are looking for insightful film analysis is a bit of a weird position to take.
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That_GuyI don't wanna be that guyRegistered Userregular
It's like if you had said that analyzing films was the FCH approach.
Just to clarify: are you saying that FCH *isn't* doing film analysis?
The point is that saying "x did a RLM on this movie" is a bit like saying "I did an Ebert on the new Marvel movie" to mean "I wrote a review."
FCH does film analysis but it's a very specific kind. Same for RLM--if I was gonna verb that in this context I would probably mean it as "made a feature length review/anlysis video" (or in a different context, "reviewed a movie while drunk,") because that's what I specifically associate with RLM. But they certainly didn't invent the video essay.
I agree with what you're saying, Astaereth, but Fencingsax's post struck me as saying something more/different than that:
I think I'll examine analysis of people who know what the fuck they're talking about, and aren't douchebags. It's like if you had said that analyzing films was the FCH approach.
To me that sounds like he's saying, "There are people who know what the fuck they're talking about and aren't douchebags. RLM ain't that, and by association FCH isn't either (i.e. RLM and FCH are douchebags and/or they don't know what they're talking about)." But it's not entirely clear to me, which is why I was asking for clarification.
"Nothing is gonna save us forever but a lot of things can save us today." - Night in the Woods
Just because you have something insightful to say, doesn't mean you can't absolutely fuck up in saying it. Those Red Letter Media videos on the prequels have some amazing things to say. They way they chose to say them was the most fucking cringeworthy thing I've ever seen. If they just had fucking said it normally it would have been great.
"The sausage of Green Earth explodes with flavor like the cannon of culinary delight."
Just because you have something insightful to say, doesn't mean you can't absolutely fuck up in saying it. Those Red Letter Media videos on the prequels have some amazing things to say. They way they chose to say them was the most fucking cringeworthy thing I've ever seen. If they just had fucking said it normally it would have been great.
If they said it with no gimmick, few would have watched it. There must have been grounded video essays on the prequel trilogy before the Plinkett character came along in 2012 - no one talks about them today.
Just because you have something insightful to say, doesn't mean you can't absolutely fuck up in saying it. Those Red Letter Media videos on the prequels have some amazing things to say. They way they chose to say them was the most fucking cringeworthy thing I've ever seen. If they just had fucking said it normally it would have been great.
If they said it with no gimmick, few would have watched it. There must have been grounded video essays on the prequel trilogy before the Plinkett character came along in 2012 - no one talks about them today.
Nah, there's a ton of succesful critics on youtube who speak normally and don't make rape jokes
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MalReynoldsThe Hunter S Thompson of incredibly mild medicinesRegistered Userregular
So...BvS and Justice League knocked him off the wagon?
You saw the same interviews I did. He looked pretty trashed at most of his press events.
Gives a whole new meaning to that hello darkness video from the BvS press interview
As someone who teeters on having a drinking habit turn into a problem, this makes me unconscionably sad.
"A new take on the epic fantasy genre... Darkly comic, relatable characters... twisted storyline."
"Readers who prefer tension and romance, Maledictions: The Offering, delivers... As serious YA fiction, I’ll give it five stars out of five. As a novel? Four and a half." - Liz Ellor My new novel: Maledictions: The Offering. Now in Paperback!
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The DCEU does make good trailers occasionally RE: Man of Steel. Unfortunately they have proven very little that they can back that up.
They haven't shown Gal Gadot speak as much. I have a hunch that Chris Pine is a much better actor than Gal Gadot.
While that's true it's wise for the movie to surround her with accomplished actors to cover her weak spots. That said, it's still a big gamble since this is her first lead role.
Meanwhile Marvel can do effectively the same thing with just 2 lines of dialog.
Ant-Man: Hey, about last time...
Falcon: It was a great audition, and it'll never happen again.
And they can get away with it because you know exactly what that refers to if you saw Ant-Man. No need at all to force a flashback that would otherwise kill the narrative.
With their flash forwards (how does this work?) they'd be having a very difficult task ahead of themselves under the best of circumstances. It'd be a big job if Marvel did it, with DC/WB it's destined to be a disaster because they're not very good at this stuff. They have no institutional memory to get it right, they'd need someone like Christopher Nolan to do the heavy lifting on that and he's noped out pretty quick post-Dark Knight saga.
Nolan couldn't even manage a competent third film in his own trilogy, I don't see him as someone to usher in a series of films about different characters.
His first two films were excellent, and he's got a skill level higher than what DC has access to. He also has his brother, Jonathan Nolan, and when they worked together they made TDK and by himself he's made Person of Interest, the short story Momento was based on, and Westworld.
On the other hand, you need actors that are not too much better (or can act that way), or else they won't shore up the weak spots--they'll highlight them.
Beyond that though, is the simple inability to grasp basic film making; SS's incompetence went beyond simply poor characterization and into the fundamentals including
PSN / Xbox / NNID: Fodder185
While it did make a lot of money did SS really cross the billion dollar mark?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mDclQowcE9I
Folding Ideas did a RLM on the film, and the review gets into the details of what was off.
When they're on their game they're insightful. Watch their Star Wars prequel reviews.
Rape jokes annoy me, and lack of self awareness doubly so. So no, I think I'll examine analysis of people who know what the fuck they're talking about, and aren't douchebags. It's like if you had said that analyzing films was the FCH approach.
They do know what they're talking about, but I do agree the narrative/persona surrounding it can be irritating.
https://www.comicbookmovie.com/batman/the-batman-unlikely-to-begin-production-until-2018-ben-affleck-announces-rehab-stint-for-alcohol-addiction-a149628
You saw the same interviews I did. He looked pretty trashed at most of his press events.
Gives a whole new meaning to that hello darkness video from the BvS press interview
The fact that his passion project bombed was probably a big deal.
"Nothing is gonna save us forever but a lot of things can save us today." - Night in the Woods
The point is that saying "x did a RLM on this movie" is a bit like saying "I did an Ebert on the new Marvel movie" to mean "I wrote a review."
FCH does film analysis but it's a very specific kind. Same for RLM--if I was gonna verb that in this context I would probably mean it as "made a feature length review/anlysis video" (or in a different context, "reviewed a movie while drunk,") because that's what I specifically associate with RLM. But they certainly didn't invent the video essay.
"Nothing is gonna save us forever but a lot of things can save us today." - Night in the Woods
Red Letter Media (i.e. the Mister Plinkett guys) and Film Crit Hulk
If they said it with no gimmick, few would have watched it. There must have been grounded video essays on the prequel trilogy before the Plinkett character came along in 2012 - no one talks about them today.
Nah, there's a ton of succesful critics on youtube who speak normally and don't make rape jokes
As someone who teeters on having a drinking habit turn into a problem, this makes me unconscionably sad.
"Readers who prefer tension and romance, Maledictions: The Offering, delivers... As serious YA fiction, I’ll give it five stars out of five. As a novel? Four and a half." - Liz Ellor
My new novel: Maledictions: The Offering. Now in Paperback!