PS - I like the new Batsuit, but I bet we wont get a lot of 'full lighting' shots of it anyway. As long as they don't do a 'suiting up' montage with a shot of the bat-butt.
I was speaking about her physical attributes, what I felt she was lacking. I never said that acting wasn't important.
And yes, asamatteroffact, contact lenses I do not fancy. Just like a bad hair dye (a good example would be Kirsten Dunst as Mary J. Watson). It didn't look right.
Oh and...she sucks at being Bettie Page.
You're an idiot.
One, she makes a hot Betty Page.
Two, I bet if you hadn't already seen her eye color, if she were wearing blue contacts you wouldn't be able to tell the difference one bit.
And three, Kirsten Dunst sucked as MJ for WAY more reasons then her hair color... in fact, her hair color just pointed out the fact that she couldn't act her way out of a paper bag.
Sentry on
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
wrote:
When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
Tonight, at the Loews IMAX theater on the upper west side of Manhattan, director Chris Nolan debuted the first six minutes of the upcoming “The Dark Knight†movie, a sequel to the Christian Bale-starring, multi-million-dollar-earning “Batman Begins,†to a crowd of about 60 people. Set to swing into theaters July 18, 2008, “Dark Knight†has been hyped for its inclusion of not just one, but two new villains—Two-Face (played by Aaron Eckhart) and the already mentioned, much discussed Joker (played controversially by Heath Ledger).
“I don’t want to bore you,†Nolan joked as he introduced the clip, which will play in select IMAX theaters prior to “I AM Legend†next weekend and was lifted directly from the film. Nolan went on to explain that “Dark Knight†marks the first time a major motion picture utilized the IMAX filming technique.
“I wanted to make the Joker’s introduction a mini film,†added the director. “That’s what this footage is. So we shot it in this higher-quality, more intense format to get across that feeling.†Then, the footage began.
Kicking off with a sweeping shot of downtown Gotham, the camera zooms in above a few buildings before focusing in on a single, traditional skyscraper covered in windows. Suddenly, one window in the skyscraper explodes outward, exposing two criminals inside. Donning clown masks and standing with a rifle, the two criminals shoot a grappling hook across a busy street below to the next building—the Gotham National Bank. The two then slide across using a zip line.
On the street below, a man stands, his face unseen as the shot creeps up from behind, a clown mask slung in his grip. A van suddenly screeches up before he climbs inside and the van hauls off again. Inside, there are now three men, all wearing clown masks. They begin negatively discussing their boss and how he’s sitting out the heist. “The guy thinks he can sit out and get a cut?†laughs one man. “Must be why they call him the Joker!â€
Back on the bank’s roof, the two men we first saw now shimmy into the bank’s security wiring while also discussing the boss. “Why do you think they call him Joker?†asks one. “I hear it’s cause he wears make-up,†answers the other. “Like war paint.â€
Suddenly, below, the three men blast into the bank, demanding money and commanding everybody to the floor. Back on the roof, the two criminals intercept the out-going emergency alarm set off by an employee. After they cancel its signal, one of the men shoots the other and heads inside for the vault.
Back inside, the clown gunmen hand all the hostages live grenades. “We wouldn’t want your hands free would we?†asks one with a laugh.
At the vault, a clown opens the door, and just then a second clown shoots him in the back. They’re taking each other out so that the cut between them grows higher! And it’s all because the boss, the Joker, has told them to.
Back in the lobby, a bank manager surprisingly begins firing on the clown gunmen with a shotgun hidden under his desk. Turns out this bank belongs to an influential mobster and the manager, fearless and crazed, says as much to the clowns as he walks defiantly at them. He takes one out with a point-blank blast.
Two remain and manage to disarm the manager by shooting him in the arm before one clown turns his gun on the other.
“I’m sure the boss told you to take me out first,†says the one holding the gun. “No,†says the other, his hands in the air as he sways back in forth as if he didn’t care a gun was pointed at his chest. “I called a bus.â€
“What?†asks the one holding a gun. And then BOOM, a school bus bursts its back end through the wall of the bank, killing the clown holding the gun! The lumpy driver steps out and asks what’s happened to the gang, just as the clown who’s life he saved shoots him without remorse.
The surviving clown begins to board the bus with bags of money when the bank manager, lying on the floor bleeding, tells the clown he has no idea who he’s messing with and asks why the crooks in this city have no beliefs anymore. The lone clown aborts boarding the bus and instead turns to the manager. The manager asks him dead to his face, “What do you believe in?â€
As the clown slowly places a concussion grenade in the manager’s mouth, he removes his mask, exposing his scar-ridden face. It’s the Joker! “I believe that whatever doesn’t kill you simply makes you stronger,†he says before smiling a huge, twisted grin.
The grenade has a string attached to its pin and as the Joker boards the bus, the string goes taut. When he pulls away and the pin comes loose, the manager lays sweating on the floor. Surely his head is about to explode! Instead, the bottom of the grenade emits a gray, harmless gas. It was a joke!
On the street, the bus pulls into traffic along with several others. Before long, sirens can be heard, but by then, the bus is lost in the crowd. The Joker gets away.
Then the footage cuts to several quick clips, including the new Batsuit in a cage, the new Batpod, the Batmobile (aka, the Tumbler), a shot of a fire truck on fire in the streets of Gotham, Batman on a roof overlooking his city and, finally, a clip of Lieutenant Gordon (played by Gary Oldman) using an ax to shatter the Batsignal.
When the lights came up, applause greeted Nolan before he invited everybody to join him in the lobby for cocktails.
Look for the footage to appear before select prints of “I Am Legend†in IMAX starting next weekend. “Hopefully they’ll play up until the movie comes out next summer,†added Nolan, who’s built a bigger, better, more intense corner into his Batman universe. Don’t be a Joker yourselves. Go see it!
And here's MTV's article of the preview;
If the opening frames of "The Dark Knight" are any indication, Batman will have his hands full come June. The Joker is on the loose, and MTV News has seen just how devilishly maniacal and dangerous he can be.
On Sunday night, a small crowd in New York gathered to watch the first six minutes of director Christopher Nolan's eagerly awaited sequel to "Batman Begins" and, holy extended trailer, the footage did not disappoint. Introduced by the beaming director and displayed on an 80-foot-tall IMAX screen, the opening of the film welcomed Heath Ledger's Joker to the Nolan/Batman universe.
And it was clear from the start, much as you might have loved Jack Nicholson's villain, the purple-clad bad man won't have the time or inclination to dance to Prince this time around. Nolan spoke at length with MTV News immediately prior to and following the special event, clearly proud of his new villain. "I think what Heath is doing is very adventurous," he said. "What he's doing is very radical. It's very much what I wanted. I knew I needed someone really fearless."
The opening sequence — specially filmed in the IMAX format, and set to debut December 14 with prints of "I Am Legend" in theaters — fulfilled a dream for Nolan, who said he had been wanting to shoot in the format for 15 years. "In the finished film, there will be four or five IMAX sequences," Nolan explained. He continued excitedly before the screening: "Everything about doing this in the IMAX format is trying to get that feeling back when I was a little kid when I'd sit in a movie theater and see images that were larger than life. That's what I'm trying to get back to with this material. I felt like introducing the Joker in this way because he's such a huge character [and it] would be a very fun thing to do."
But Nolan also revealed that not all the IMAX scenes will be action-filled. "Some of them are actually quiet scenes which pictorially we thought would be interesting. It's not all the slam-bam scenes," he said.
As the lights dimmed, the first images were revealed, of a gleaming and bright Gotham City. The camera moves in close on a building when suddenly the calm is shattered, quite literally, by a broken window. A group of clown-mask-clad robbers are about to seize a bank. They bicker about the mysterious man who has employed them. "Why do they call him the Joker?" one asks another. It's a refrain almost identical to those rooftop thugs who wonder about the mysterious "bat" in the opening frames of Tim Burton's "Batman."
Soon we are inside the bank as a tense standoff is under way. None of the employees resist, save one played by character-actor extraordinaire William Fichtner. This is a mob bank, we learn, and the wrong place to mess with, even for a group of seasoned criminals.
The controlled heist degenerates into a mess quickly enough, with each of the robbers mysteriously getting taken out. But it's not Batman knocking them off — rather, it's one of the robbers themselves. Just as the final two robbers are set to leave, one pulls a gun on the other. "I bet the Joker told you to kill me as soon as we loaded the cash," he says, clearly with the upper hand.
The eerily calm but playful response comes. "No, no, no. He killed the bus driver."
Before the gun-toting clown can finish asking, "What bus driver?," he is taken out by a school bus crashing into the bank. "School's out. Time to go!" screams the sole survivor of the gang.
All that remains for him is the bank employee (Fichtner) lying at his feet. By now we're pretty sure these are going to be his last words: "The criminals in this town used to believe in things. Honor. Respect. What do you believe in?" He screams it again, louder, "What do you believe in?"
And the mask comes off. The grinning, scarred face of the Joker is revealed at last. His face filled the 8-story-high screen as the clip played. "I believe whatever doesn't kill you simply makes you ...," he said. He pauses on the last word: " ... stranger."
As the Joker made his getaway, the sequence ended, but before the lights returned, the audience was treated to quick tantalizing flashes of the rest of the film. The Joker firing what looks to be an automatic weapon in a city street. Police Commissioner Gordon raising an ax dramatically. Batman whizzing by in his batpod. And finally, Gordon lowering the ax, destroying what we see now was the bat signal. Troubled times clearly await in Gotham. And it's clear who's to blame.
Nolan explained to MTV News that the Joker we meet in "The Dark Knight" is fully formed. Don't look for an origin story here. "To me, the Joker is an absolute," he said. "There are no shades of gray to him — maybe shades of purple. He's unbelievably dark. He bursts in just as he did in the comics."
Though there was no sign of much of the supporting cast in this extended preview, Nolan stressed there's much more to the story. Asked about Aaron Eckhart's Harvey "Two-Face" Dent, the director said "his story is in some ways the backbone of the film. [Bruce Wayne and Harvey] have an interesting relationship. They're friends and rivals."
And what about the caped crusader we left at the end of "Batman Begins"? Nolan explained that "he's a little more sure of himself" in the new film. "We didn't want him sitting around wrestling with the same angst. It's all-new angst," he laughed.
Nolan, who wrapped filming just two weeks ago, said he's shooting for a running time comparable to the first film's 140 minutes. Congratulated on the ambitious slam-bang start to his sequel, MTV News asked if the next six minutes could help but live up to the first. The director smiled and sighed nearly in unison. "That's what I'm working on now."
There are ome discrepancies between the two articles, probably because Wizard's reporter was incompetent.
Apparently both the Iron Man movie and the new Incredible Hulk movie are shooting a scene TOGETHER. It is not known which movie this scene will be included with, perhaps in both. But if this does pan out and is true, then it will be the first step in bringing together the Marvel movies for a potential Avengers movie.
I was speaking about her physical attributes, what I felt she was lacking. I never said that acting wasn't important.
And yes, asamatteroffact, contact lenses I do not fancy. Just like a bad hair dye (a good example would be Kirsten Dunst as Mary J. Watson). It didn't look right.
Oh and...she sucks at being Bettie Page.
You're an idiot.
One, she makes a hot Betty Page.
Two, I bet if you hadn't already seen her eye color, if she were wearing blue contacts you wouldn't be able to tell the difference one bit.
And three, Kirsten Dunst sucked as MJ for WAY more reasons then her hair color... in fact, her hair color just pointed out the fact that she couldn't act her way out of a paper bag.
The only person who makes a hot Bettie Page (you spelled her name wrong) is Bettie Page. Everyone who tries to imitate her has failed. Yes, even the object of my love...
And I find it humorous every is getting off on my eye contacts comment. Maybe posting pictures of hot half naked women will calm everyone down.
And I find it humorous every is getting off on my eye contacts comment. Maybe posting pictures of hot half naked women will calm everyone down.
God Damn It!
What the fuck is wrong with you? Haven't you heard of a spoiler tag, so some of us can read the forum at work without a page and a half of skin pics taking up the screen?
That said, it was the most absurd part of your post. Of course it's going to attract attention--absurb nonsense tends to do that.
I honestly don't expect someone who runs a Lucy Lawless fan site to see reason.
I just expect them to see sadness...
Sentry on
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
wrote:
When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
Apparently both the Iron Man movie and the new Incredible Hulk movie are shooting a scene TOGETHER. It is not known which movie this scene will be included with, perhaps in both. But if this does pan out and is true, then it will be the first step in bringing together the Marvel movies for a potential Avengers movie.
Oh please God, have this be true. Anything that lets me have a slim chance at seeing a
Hulkbuster
on screen in my lifetime. Hey, a guy can dream that this rumor would leave to something like that.
A friend of mine did some sfx when the Hulk was filming here in Toronto. He mentioned the guns used against the Hulk have "STARK ENT." on the sides of them...
New promo pic for Iron Man, showing off the real life armor. Sweet god, I want one now.
I declare any and all further debate on the internet regarding 'best comic to movie costume' now null and void.
Winnah!
if you want to see a LARGE version of it, then open the spoiler:
so yeah...buy me one.
DraXXXen on
0
Garlic Breadi'm a bitch i'm a bitch i'm a bitch i'm aRegistered User, Disagreeableregular
What's with the two holes in the wall right above the word "Knight"?
Glory holes?
Sentry on
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
wrote:
When I was a little kid, I always pretended I was the hero,' Skip said.
'Fuck yeah, me too. What little kid ever pretended to be part of the lynch-mob?'
What's with the two holes in the wall right above the word "Knight"?
Glory holes?
It wouldn't surprise me if there was meaning to it, but the right one at least looks like either peeling paint (the curl to the grey) or black splotches of some sort, as opposed to a hole
Forar on
First they came for the Muslims, and we said NOT TODAY, MOTHERFUCKER!
Posts
Jesus christ in a hat. Thats terrible.
PS - I like the new Batsuit, but I bet we wont get a lot of 'full lighting' shots of it anyway. As long as they don't do a 'suiting up' montage with a shot of the bat-butt.
Knowledge is power!
PSN: OrneryRooster
Amalgam: Black Bat Bolt
as in the rapper?
because he's actually a pretty solid actor.
You're an idiot.
One, she makes a hot Betty Page.
Two, I bet if you hadn't already seen her eye color, if she were wearing blue contacts you wouldn't be able to tell the difference one bit.
And three, Kirsten Dunst sucked as MJ for WAY more reasons then her hair color... in fact, her hair color just pointed out the fact that she couldn't act her way out of a paper bag.
http://www.wizarduniverse.com/movies/batmanbegins2/006550689.cfm
Tonight, at the Loews IMAX theater on the upper west side of Manhattan, director Chris Nolan debuted the first six minutes of the upcoming “The Dark Knight†movie, a sequel to the Christian Bale-starring, multi-million-dollar-earning “Batman Begins,†to a crowd of about 60 people. Set to swing into theaters July 18, 2008, “Dark Knight†has been hyped for its inclusion of not just one, but two new villains—Two-Face (played by Aaron Eckhart) and the already mentioned, much discussed Joker (played controversially by Heath Ledger).
“I don’t want to bore you,†Nolan joked as he introduced the clip, which will play in select IMAX theaters prior to “I AM Legend†next weekend and was lifted directly from the film. Nolan went on to explain that “Dark Knight†marks the first time a major motion picture utilized the IMAX filming technique.
“I wanted to make the Joker’s introduction a mini film,†added the director. “That’s what this footage is. So we shot it in this higher-quality, more intense format to get across that feeling.†Then, the footage began.
Kicking off with a sweeping shot of downtown Gotham, the camera zooms in above a few buildings before focusing in on a single, traditional skyscraper covered in windows. Suddenly, one window in the skyscraper explodes outward, exposing two criminals inside. Donning clown masks and standing with a rifle, the two criminals shoot a grappling hook across a busy street below to the next building—the Gotham National Bank. The two then slide across using a zip line.
On the street below, a man stands, his face unseen as the shot creeps up from behind, a clown mask slung in his grip. A van suddenly screeches up before he climbs inside and the van hauls off again. Inside, there are now three men, all wearing clown masks. They begin negatively discussing their boss and how he’s sitting out the heist. “The guy thinks he can sit out and get a cut?†laughs one man. “Must be why they call him the Joker!â€
Back on the bank’s roof, the two men we first saw now shimmy into the bank’s security wiring while also discussing the boss. “Why do you think they call him Joker?†asks one. “I hear it’s cause he wears make-up,†answers the other. “Like war paint.â€
Suddenly, below, the three men blast into the bank, demanding money and commanding everybody to the floor. Back on the roof, the two criminals intercept the out-going emergency alarm set off by an employee. After they cancel its signal, one of the men shoots the other and heads inside for the vault.
Back inside, the clown gunmen hand all the hostages live grenades. “We wouldn’t want your hands free would we?†asks one with a laugh.
At the vault, a clown opens the door, and just then a second clown shoots him in the back. They’re taking each other out so that the cut between them grows higher! And it’s all because the boss, the Joker, has told them to.
Back in the lobby, a bank manager surprisingly begins firing on the clown gunmen with a shotgun hidden under his desk. Turns out this bank belongs to an influential mobster and the manager, fearless and crazed, says as much to the clowns as he walks defiantly at them. He takes one out with a point-blank blast.
Two remain and manage to disarm the manager by shooting him in the arm before one clown turns his gun on the other.
“I’m sure the boss told you to take me out first,†says the one holding the gun. “No,†says the other, his hands in the air as he sways back in forth as if he didn’t care a gun was pointed at his chest. “I called a bus.â€
“What?†asks the one holding a gun. And then BOOM, a school bus bursts its back end through the wall of the bank, killing the clown holding the gun! The lumpy driver steps out and asks what’s happened to the gang, just as the clown who’s life he saved shoots him without remorse.
The surviving clown begins to board the bus with bags of money when the bank manager, lying on the floor bleeding, tells the clown he has no idea who he’s messing with and asks why the crooks in this city have no beliefs anymore. The lone clown aborts boarding the bus and instead turns to the manager. The manager asks him dead to his face, “What do you believe in?â€
As the clown slowly places a concussion grenade in the manager’s mouth, he removes his mask, exposing his scar-ridden face. It’s the Joker! “I believe that whatever doesn’t kill you simply makes you stronger,†he says before smiling a huge, twisted grin.
The grenade has a string attached to its pin and as the Joker boards the bus, the string goes taut. When he pulls away and the pin comes loose, the manager lays sweating on the floor. Surely his head is about to explode! Instead, the bottom of the grenade emits a gray, harmless gas. It was a joke!
On the street, the bus pulls into traffic along with several others. Before long, sirens can be heard, but by then, the bus is lost in the crowd. The Joker gets away.
Then the footage cuts to several quick clips, including the new Batsuit in a cage, the new Batpod, the Batmobile (aka, the Tumbler), a shot of a fire truck on fire in the streets of Gotham, Batman on a roof overlooking his city and, finally, a clip of Lieutenant Gordon (played by Gary Oldman) using an ax to shatter the Batsignal.
When the lights came up, applause greeted Nolan before he invited everybody to join him in the lobby for cocktails.
Look for the footage to appear before select prints of “I Am Legend†in IMAX starting next weekend. “Hopefully they’ll play up until the movie comes out next summer,†added Nolan, who’s built a bigger, better, more intense corner into his Batman universe. Don’t be a Joker yourselves. Go see it!
And here's MTV's article of the preview;
On Sunday night, a small crowd in New York gathered to watch the first six minutes of director Christopher Nolan's eagerly awaited sequel to "Batman Begins" and, holy extended trailer, the footage did not disappoint. Introduced by the beaming director and displayed on an 80-foot-tall IMAX screen, the opening of the film welcomed Heath Ledger's Joker to the Nolan/Batman universe.
And it was clear from the start, much as you might have loved Jack Nicholson's villain, the purple-clad bad man won't have the time or inclination to dance to Prince this time around. Nolan spoke at length with MTV News immediately prior to and following the special event, clearly proud of his new villain. "I think what Heath is doing is very adventurous," he said. "What he's doing is very radical. It's very much what I wanted. I knew I needed someone really fearless."
The opening sequence — specially filmed in the IMAX format, and set to debut December 14 with prints of "I Am Legend" in theaters — fulfilled a dream for Nolan, who said he had been wanting to shoot in the format for 15 years. "In the finished film, there will be four or five IMAX sequences," Nolan explained. He continued excitedly before the screening: "Everything about doing this in the IMAX format is trying to get that feeling back when I was a little kid when I'd sit in a movie theater and see images that were larger than life. That's what I'm trying to get back to with this material. I felt like introducing the Joker in this way because he's such a huge character [and it] would be a very fun thing to do."
But Nolan also revealed that not all the IMAX scenes will be action-filled. "Some of them are actually quiet scenes which pictorially we thought would be interesting. It's not all the slam-bam scenes," he said.
As the lights dimmed, the first images were revealed, of a gleaming and bright Gotham City. The camera moves in close on a building when suddenly the calm is shattered, quite literally, by a broken window. A group of clown-mask-clad robbers are about to seize a bank. They bicker about the mysterious man who has employed them. "Why do they call him the Joker?" one asks another. It's a refrain almost identical to those rooftop thugs who wonder about the mysterious "bat" in the opening frames of Tim Burton's "Batman."
Soon we are inside the bank as a tense standoff is under way. None of the employees resist, save one played by character-actor extraordinaire William Fichtner. This is a mob bank, we learn, and the wrong place to mess with, even for a group of seasoned criminals.
The controlled heist degenerates into a mess quickly enough, with each of the robbers mysteriously getting taken out. But it's not Batman knocking them off — rather, it's one of the robbers themselves. Just as the final two robbers are set to leave, one pulls a gun on the other. "I bet the Joker told you to kill me as soon as we loaded the cash," he says, clearly with the upper hand.
The eerily calm but playful response comes. "No, no, no. He killed the bus driver."
Before the gun-toting clown can finish asking, "What bus driver?," he is taken out by a school bus crashing into the bank. "School's out. Time to go!" screams the sole survivor of the gang.
All that remains for him is the bank employee (Fichtner) lying at his feet. By now we're pretty sure these are going to be his last words: "The criminals in this town used to believe in things. Honor. Respect. What do you believe in?" He screams it again, louder, "What do you believe in?"
And the mask comes off. The grinning, scarred face of the Joker is revealed at last. His face filled the 8-story-high screen as the clip played. "I believe whatever doesn't kill you simply makes you ...," he said. He pauses on the last word: " ... stranger."
As the Joker made his getaway, the sequence ended, but before the lights returned, the audience was treated to quick tantalizing flashes of the rest of the film. The Joker firing what looks to be an automatic weapon in a city street. Police Commissioner Gordon raising an ax dramatically. Batman whizzing by in his batpod. And finally, Gordon lowering the ax, destroying what we see now was the bat signal. Troubled times clearly await in Gotham. And it's clear who's to blame.
Nolan explained to MTV News that the Joker we meet in "The Dark Knight" is fully formed. Don't look for an origin story here. "To me, the Joker is an absolute," he said. "There are no shades of gray to him — maybe shades of purple. He's unbelievably dark. He bursts in just as he did in the comics."
Though there was no sign of much of the supporting cast in this extended preview, Nolan stressed there's much more to the story. Asked about Aaron Eckhart's Harvey "Two-Face" Dent, the director said "his story is in some ways the backbone of the film. [Bruce Wayne and Harvey] have an interesting relationship. They're friends and rivals."
And what about the caped crusader we left at the end of "Batman Begins"? Nolan explained that "he's a little more sure of himself" in the new film. "We didn't want him sitting around wrestling with the same angst. It's all-new angst," he laughed.
Nolan, who wrapped filming just two weeks ago, said he's shooting for a running time comparable to the first film's 140 minutes. Congratulated on the ambitious slam-bang start to his sequel, MTV News asked if the next six minutes could help but live up to the first. The director smiled and sighed nearly in unison. "That's what I'm working on now."
There are ome discrepancies between the two articles, probably because Wizard's reporter was incompetent.
NEED BATMAN NOW.
Read the original posting here: http://www.aintitcool.com/node/34962
Oh please God, have this be true. Anything that lets me have a slim chance at seeing a
The only person who makes a hot Bettie Page (you spelled her name wrong) is Bettie Page. Everyone who tries to imitate her has failed. Yes, even the object of my love...
And I find it humorous every is getting off on my eye contacts comment. Maybe posting pictures of hot half naked women will calm everyone down.
GEEBS NOTE: images removed
God Damn It!
What the fuck is wrong with you? Haven't you heard of a spoiler tag, so some of us can read the forum at work without a page and a half of skin pics taking up the screen?
That said, it was the most absurd part of your post. Of course it's going to attract attention--absurb nonsense tends to do that.
I just expect them to see sadness...
A friend of mine did some sfx when the Hulk was filming here in Toronto. He mentioned the guns used against the Hulk have "STARK ENT." on the sides of them...
I declare any and all further debate on the internet regarding 'best comic to movie costume' now null and void.
Winnah!
if you want to see a LARGE version of it, then open the spoiler:
so yeah...buy me one.
i mean it looks good
but it looks like plastic
Because it is?
but he's not Plastic Man
oh god what if he is
what if this was all a ruse
Glory holes?
There's a token percentage of iron in every suit, to keep it real.
And for truth-in-advertising purposes.
It wouldn't surprise me if there was meaning to it, but the right one at least looks like either peeling paint (the curl to the grey) or black splotches of some sort, as opposed to a hole
Nice nip in the bud 8-)
Those black spots are eyes. That red bat-symbol also serves as a mouth. It's meant to be the Joker's face. That's why the wall is white.
Dude, they are talking about the black spots above the text at the bottom.
Oh that's ridiculous. Where's his nose?
http://img233.imageshack.us/my.php?image=batanimeua6.jpg
Really digging how Bats look like in this, plus Bruce Timm is involved!
Bruce Timm?
Animated tie in between BB and TDK??
I need new pants!