deadline saying opening late shows bigger than expected ... equal to world war z.
I'm curious if Toronto is noticeable at all in the final product.
Not really. I mean, if you look closely enough you might recognize some things, but nothing really noticeable in general.
Really? I thought the shot in the trailer of Elizabeth+Dundas (One block west of Bay/Dundas) was pretty recognizable.Right behind City Hall.
i figured better to get premium centre ultraavx seats than shitty IMAX ones on the side.
I think most people expected it to be front loaded since it's a fanboy affair. Not getting my hopes up for a big weekend number. But I'll keep talking it up to family and friends and berating people with shit on Facebook.deadline saying opening late shows bigger than expected ... equal to world war z.
Edit: have to also agree with everything duckroll said but would also say that I see most of that as minor flaws... As a first attempt at bringing robots on the big screen and making a summer movie filled with big time action I think it delivers. And fitting a lot of duckrolls elements would not make it feel as lean and snappy as the completed product is.
Just got back. It was a pretty enjoyable movie and definitely more or less what I expected from "giant robots vs giant monsters" and Del Toro. Unfortunately it wasn't more than what I expected, which could have made it pretty amazing. It's certainly an honest film filled with heart, and a surprisingly family friendly one too, but the scope of the story felt extremely narrow - to the detriment of the narrative. There's nothing really wrong with the base story though, it just lacks any sort of fleshing out at all. The characters are completely undeveloped outside of Mako, and I don't really feel that there was much room for anyone or anything (that includes robots and monsters) to truly shine in the movie.
It goes through the motions of the robots/monsters theme well enough to entertain on that level, and I'm really happy that someone finally managed to make a big budget blockbuster featuring my favorite fanboy desires, but I think that there could have been something much more special here if it was approached in a different way. I would be much more invested in a narrative set during the earlier period of the war, showing the developing of the Jaegers and the Kaiju actually destroying cities and mankind reflecting on the aftermath of the battles. It would still have lots of action, but it would also be more memorable.
The best parts of the cheese in the film are definitely the parts with Ron Perlman's character and his organization. Wish we got to see more of that too. I really dug the main music theme too, it was right out of some 80s or 90s cartoon. Really wish more of the action was set in daytime and in cities instead, but I think I'll live. Seems a bit of a waste to have robots of different colors which look great together, and then just make them all look similar with dim lighting anyway.
Oh well, at least I got to watch a decent live action ROBOTS VS MONSTERS movie before I die. That's one thing off the bucket list!![]()
deadline saying opening late shows bigger than expected ... equal to world war z.
I haven't seen the film yet, but am interested to. Given all of the generally positive reviews, is the trailer just really poorly cut? Because that was not interesting, or flattering, at all.
Wouldn't surprise me at all. And that tends to be the stuff that gets cut out anyways, as was the case with Kingdom of Heaven and the LotR films.Any chance we will get a directors cut of the movie? Del Toro said the initial cut of the movie was 3 hours long. It would be interesting to see what got cut out and whether that fixes some of the issues people are having with thin characters and plot.
Wouldn't surprise me at all. And that tends to be the stuff that gets cut out anyways, as was the case with Kingdom of Heaven and the LotR films.
deadline saying opening late shows bigger than expected ... equal to world war z.
Fanboys turned out in strong numbers Thursday night to see Guillermo del Toro's Pacific Rim, which took in $3.6 million to match the start of World War Z, which went on to gross $66.4 million for the weekend.
Paramount's zombie extravaganza World War Z grossed $3.6 million as it began its North American assault Thursday night, competing for attention with the final NBA championship game between the Miami Heat and the San Antonio Spurs.
Am I the only one a bit offended by some of the writing about this movie? Just leads more credence that there is a segment that wants this to fail, painting people that want to see it negatively
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-report-pacific-rim-584582
Here's the same type of article for WWZ
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-report-brad-pitts-572656
I will say that for a Thursday night in LDS-ville, the IMAX theater I went too was pretty much full.
Curious where you were in Utah? all of the theaters around me non 3D (Utah County) were sold out for Pacific Rim.
Uh, look at the entire concept and marketing of the movie. It is THE fanboy/geek movie, seems pretty on point.
A few years ago you could have made the same case about Iron Man.
Should have cut theAny chance we will get a directors cut of the movie? Del Toro said the initial cut of the movie was 3 hours long. It would be interesting to see what got cut out and whether that fixes some of the issues people are having with thin characters and plot.
Just canceled the apocalypse. It drags a little in the middle but it was fantastic on the whole. Probably the best summer blockbuster this year and I think I would even rank it ahead of Avengers. I would have liked a bit more meat to the origin story though. Perhaps a prequel would make sense.
EDIT: Oh and I think the experience would translate well to an IMAX screen. Will probably catch an IMAX viewing next week.
I'm wondering how a prequel would work....
I suppose they could build it up from the very start and just have the climax either be the first cat 2 or first cat 3 monsters
No idea. For me, I've always found the origin part of monsters/disaster movies to be the most interesting which is why I enjoyed Cloverfield so much; it was basically just one extended first-person origin story.
Just don't expect anything more.
I read the comic. It serves as a prequel.
Probably not under the direction of Del Toro, yeah. I think he did as good a job as he could with what he knows he was really good at, and I don't really want to fault him for that. I just find the universe in Pacific Rim really interesting beyond the movie, and I find it a bit of a waste that we won't see a lot of that. Maybe I'm just pessimistic because I expect the movie to kinda tank and not become a franchise of any sort.![]()
I've just come from straight from the cinema and was (unusually) compelled to share my thoughts.
First I should preface that I don't watch film trailers, so all I knew about this going in was: Del Toro, giant robots & (maybe) giant monsters.
In two words: Oh dear.
In slightly more words: There is absolutely nothing in this film, except perhaps Ron Perlman's slight presence, that would lead you to suspect that it's directed by Del Toro. Instead, it has all the hallmarks of a film from Michael Bay, or even dare I say it, McG. A cast of two-dimensional non-entities, spouting absolutely nothing of interest, peppered with competent (occasionally interesting) action. It's incredibly dull. I'd even say that the first Transformers is the better film.
Such a disappointment.
Still, it was alright to watch some giant robots smashing around some giant monsters for a couple of hours, as we don't really get much of that in the cinema. Just don't expect anything more.
I've just come from straight from the cinema and was (unusually) compelled to share my thoughts.
First I should preface that I don't watch film trailers, so all I knew about this going in was: Del Toro, giant robots & (maybe) giant monsters.
In two words: Oh dear.
In slightly more words: There is absolutely nothing in this film, except perhaps Ron Perlman's slight presence, that would lead you to suspect that it's directed by Del Toro. Instead, it has all the hallmarks of a film from Michael Bay, or even dare I say it, McG. A cast of two-dimensional non-entities, spouting absolutely nothing of interest, peppered with competent (occasionally interesting) action. It's incredibly dull. I'd even say that the first Transformers is the better film.
Such a disappointment.
Still, it was alright to watch some giant robots smashing around some giant monsters for a couple of hours, as we don't really get much of that in the cinema. Just don't expect anything more.
He said/Hinted at and Anime at the pre-screening he had the other day.
Am I the only one a bit offended by some of the writing about this movie? Just leads more credence that there is a segment that wants this to fail, painting people that want to see it negatively
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-report-pacific-rim-584582
Here's the same type of article for WWZ
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-report-brad-pitts-572656
I just don't understand how people could expect more.