Has nothing to do with Batman Begins. Rumour is that there's a sequence in the extended edition.One question, Why is Wayne Manor burnt? It has something to do with Batman Begins or has a total different cause?
Has nothing to do with Batman Begins. Rumour is that there's a sequence in the extended edition.One question, Why is Wayne Manor burnt? It has something to do with Batman Begins or has a total different cause?
Because you shouldn't have to make assumptions to fill holes in a bad script. Maybe Supes x-ray visioned Batman and did some googling on Bruce Wayne, but how hard is it to show that? This movie has two separate scenes where main characters watch .avi files on a USB drive, yet it wastes no time showing how Lex uncovers Superman's secret identity or how Superman uncovers Batman's secret identity.
I agree that in a film that went as far as to show that e-mail (which I personally had no problem with at all), it SHOULD have shown such an important plot point. However, when we were able to see Clark listening in to Alfred communicating with Bruce at Luthor's party, I felt that we were given enough ammo to make that connection. To be honest i was happier not knowing that Clark may have known because that made the whole Martha scene more surprising and emotional for me, as in I wasn't expecting it.
Smallville used that theme tooTo be blunt, the Williams theme is dead. It's tied exclusively to the Donner series (with Superman Returns was a direct sequel to), so at this point it's Zimmer or something else new going forward.
Barfso i read a rumor that the bad guy in JL is going to be aquaman and Atlantis.
no idea if what i read has anything reliable behind it
One question, Why is Wayne Manor burnt? It has something to do with Batman Begins or has a total different cause?
I still dont get why critics rate this movie so low, I mean is is not a 90% or 80% sure, I will even understand not a 70% but this movie is not 29% either
Was I the only one who thought it was weird that the Superman/Doomsday fight is going on for like 10 minutes in movie time and the government had a nuke all ready to fire the instant they saw Supes taking Doomsday to space?
The pacing of this movie is so bad
I still dont get why critics rate this movie so low, I mean is is not a 90% or 80% sure, I will even understand not a 70% but this movie is not 29% either
I still dont get why critics rate this movie so low, I mean is is not a 90% or 80% sure, I will even understand not a 70% but this movie is not 29% either
The way I observed that moment was Superman having been battered, beaten, and accepting his death, utters his last words that Lex Luthor has a woman named Martha. It's the dying clue trope. Martha's not a word used as a weapon to spurn dredged memories for Bruce, but a "kill me, but spare them" moment. It's in line with Superman's behavior throughout the final act: self-sacrificing facing Batman, a nuclear detonation, and ultimately Doomsday while weakened and wielding the Kryptonite spear. Save others at the expense of his own life.
Plus, the nuke is able to follow a target that is changing directions/velocities/accelerations with no problem whatsoever. Not only did I think that the nuke was incredibly stupid, but it was also incredibly pointless.
They float up to space, get nuked, Doomsey lands back on Earth stronger than ever, and Supes has to float around in space to recover his strength. But in the end, the fight continues exactly as it was before the nuke. It was just a 5 minute detraction to the fight. It really didn't add anything. It just felt like padding.
That's not how Rotten Tomatoes works. A 29 TOMATOMETER means 29% of critics rate it 59% or less. So maybe a bunch of them are just a bit below the 70% floor you're setting.
Maybe it was put it to give a way to show Superman taking the fight to space like fans complained, but also to take Superman out so that Doomsday could come back to Earth and get the other two involved in the fight. Should've made a bigger deal of him recovering. They showed his eyes light up, and then he come crashing down a minute or so later.
yeah it really felt like there was more planned for that segment, but then they started editing this 2+ hour behemoth and said fuck it.
I think they should have cut the whole segment of Lois and the scepter. She had no logical reason to toss it in the water and no logical reason to go back for it. That whole thing was another waste of time. They could have fleshed out the nuke part instead.
Plus, the nuke is able to follow a target that is changing directions/velocities/accelerations with no problem whatsoever. Not only did I think that the nuke was incredibly stupid, but it was also incredibly pointless.
They float up to space, get nuked, Doomsey lands back on Earth stronger than ever, and Supes has to float around in space to recover his strength. But in the end, the fight continues exactly as it was before the nuke. It was just a waste of 5 minutes. It really didn't add anything. It just felt like padding.
You mean 71% rated it 59% or low? Ok, let me rephrase, this movie is mot as bad to be less than 6/10., I think the user review is more accurratte.
I love how box office is only a measure of how good the film is if you liked it.
There's always user reviews to fall back to. It's not like those are heavily manipulated by dedicated fanbases even before they see the movie.
The latterSo did that Mercy character have powers or was she just there to look good and get blown up on a whim?
I think movie user review even out, for every fanboy giving it a 10 you will have a hater giving it a 0.
Should have been 2 movies. BvsS and SvsB. Same story from 2 Perspectives, with only the climax sharing a similar yet unique pace and finale. Yes, I know the challenges involved with the process.
Movie in a nutshell:
![]()
Just finished watching it.
Can someone explain to me why the writing is shit considering it's from the writer who won an Oscar for Argo?
I know a large part is Snyder and Goyer, but... I mean... Please, anyone, help me understand, W-why?!?
Just finished watching it.
Can someone explain to me why the writing is shit considering it's from the writer who won an Oscar for Argo?
I know a large part is Snyder and Goyer, but... I mean... Please, anyone, help me understand, W-why?!?
Are you saying the writing isn't bad or that it isn't from Terrio.Well, it's not.
So there's that.
I think that is exactly what makes them completely unreliable. It sure works both ways, but it's foolish to just assume they will cancel each other out.
Explain to me why is foolish to think both sides extremes dont cancel each other out?
Are you serious with this? The only way they could cancel each other out is if you assume there are the exact number of trolls giving 10/10s and 0/0s (or any other score) for the exact same reasons.
Are you saying the writing isn't bad or that it isn't from Terrio.
And on top of that, if they do exactly "cancel each other out" (highly unlikely), that would still be a 5 on average on their part, which also influences the total average when including the sane people.
Are you serious with this? The only way they could cancel each other out is if you assume there are the exact number of trolls giving 10/10s and 0/0s (or any other score) for the exact same reasons. It is actually a pretty dumb assumption to make.
Unless you have a detailed breakdown of every single user score and the reasons behind each particular score you can't claim they are cancelling each other out and what's left is an honest representation of "real" scores.
And on top of that, if they do exactly "cancel each other out" (highly unlikely), that would still be a 5 on average on their part, which also influences the total average when including the sane people.
Shit writing. I don't really think it's defensible as being outright shit, whatever issues it might have.
Though the Knightmare is apparently right out of Goyer's draft, so idk, could be not-Terrio as well, depending.
Even if they are not the same exact numbers of fanboys and trolls (which I dont think they are) the total average you will get will still be a percentage close the presented score, basically a margin of error, unless the vast majority of user review scores are from trolls and fans (which I dount it)
Case in point, if the user review were so unreliable, you wouldnt had two different sites with very similar user review numbers.
Numbers canceling each other out have a neutral effect, they dont become a 5.
Zack Snyder just wanted to have some fun with the character! Which is why Jimmy Olsen gets shot in the head by a terrorist and Mercy Graves dies in a suicide bombing. That's fun, right? So fun.So did that Mercy character have powers or was she just there to look good and get blown up on a whim?
Even if they are not the same exact numbers of fanboys and trolls (which I dont think they are) the total average you will get will still be a percentage close the presented score, basically a margin of error, unless the vast majority of user review scores are from trolls and fans (which I dount it)
Case in point, if the user review were so unreliable, you wouldnt had two different sites with very similar user review numbers.
You are saying nonsense things. Imagine a case:
Two people see the movie for real, both enjoy it, rate it 10. 98 fanboys go to war, split evenly, 49 vote 100 and 49 vote 0. The "true" average would be 10, but the fanboy war means there are 51 votes for 10 and 49 votes for 0: averaging, therefore, 5.1.
We leave it as an exercise to the reader to explore other ratios of true voters to saboteurs.
Also I don't know why you think a fanboy war wouldn't take place on two review aggregate sites simultaneously, consisting of the same "combatants".
Plot twist: Maybe the writing isn't shit!
Hahaha, ok guys. I guess I'm in the minority. I guess it makes sense for Superman to hear Alfred through Bruce's ear piece, but not hear a bomb in a chair. I also love how there are no witnesses to the bombing, except Superman, yet everyone already knows it was a bomb.Well, it's not.
So there's that.
Saw this on twitter...
![]()
Hahaha, ok guys. I guess I'm in the minority. I guess it makes sense for Superman to hear Alfred through Bruce's ear piece, but not hear a bomb in a chair. I also love how there are no witnesses to the bombing, except Superman, yet everyone already knows it was a bomb.
Or the constant reminder of God this and God that. Or how Devils come from the sky but then it becomes the opposite at the end of the movie, just so LL's lines make some sort of sense.
This movie was bad.
Ghaleon mentioned something in another thread that I still can't believe I hadn't noticed until it was pointed out to me, and it is the lynchpin for why their conflict feels so unsatisfying.
Batman and Superman never fucking talk.
They both have problems with each other. We spend a great amount of time on Batman's hang-ups with Supes, and we get a bit dedicated to showing why Superman doesn't like Batman. Superman is dangerous. Batman is Brutal. Got it.
But they never communicate that to each other. Superman crashes Batman's car to threaten him, while Batman mumbles a threat back. Then the next time they meet up is, Superman is trying to get Batman to help him find his mom, while Batman is making rants about 'bravery' and how Superman 'isn't even a man', which has nothing to do with what the film has been building up toward (Batman's fear of Superman posing a danger).
And this isn't a nitpick or grumbling about the lack of comic book faithfulness. This is writing 101: The central narrative conflict gets resolved by the end of the movie. This is a conflict, especially Batman's side, has been built up for over an hour and a half and not only does it never get resolved, it doesn't even get addressed by the characters. They just stop fighting because something else was happening, but the problems that kicked off their issues still exist unchanged. It's very transparent that the the film was so eager to get to them fighting and teaming up, it just made up reasons for why that would happen and forgot that it had to connect it with the rest of the movie, so you have Bruce being angry that Superman is a danger, then he's ranting about bravery and being a 'real man', then he's cool with Superman because he recognizes that he has a mom like him and is therefore a person, while Superman just flat out drops his issue with Batman, never to be brought up again.
Having such sloppy handling of your narrative threads and not forming your story into a cohesive whole is something that is widely considered bad, bad writing.
Hahaha, ok guys. I guess I'm in the minority. I guess it makes sense for Superman to hear Alfred through Bruce's ear piece, but not hear a bomb in a chair. I also love how there are no witnesses to the bombing, except Superman, yet everyone already knows it was a bomb.
Or the constant reminder of God this and God that. Or how Devils come from the sky but then it becomes the opposite at the end of the movie, just so LL's lines make some sort of sense.
This movie was bad.
This relies on a fundamental misreading of the conflicts and the characters. Bruce's conflict is over his feelings of helplessness, that his legacy is going to amount to nothing, and that he feels threatened by Superman's existence. All three of these things are resolved by the end. The Martha moment is the start of his turnaround, not the end of it. If Superman hadn't sacrificed himself to save the world, who knows what might have happened? Maybe the next day Bruce takes another swing at it.
That's not a misreading at all, I just don't expand that to include all the reasons why he feels fear against superman's power. That he makes Batman's dick feel tiny in addition to being a danger doesn't contradict anything I said. The point is that Batman's issue with Superman's existence itself as a danger isn't resolved.
Besides, you're kind of digging the hole deeper. If you're saying Batman is fundamentally unchanged, then that makes it all the clearer that the movie's narrative arc is incomplete and BvS has accomplished nothing as far as the characters of the film are concerned.