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Pacific Rim Spoiler Thread: Today, We Are Cancelling the Use of Spoiler Tags!

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Simple, Gainax became greedy and stubborn.

Link: http://www.crunchyroll.com/anime-ne...d-over-live-action-evangelion-movie-agreement

Either now, or by the time Pacific Rim opens in Japan next month, Gainax will be kicking themselves for all the lost opportunities since the live-action Evangelion rights now appear in legal hell.

Well done Gainax, you screwed up big time.

Meh, it's probably for the better. To do an Evangelion film justice they'd need to have a big-ass budget like Pacific Rim and there's no chance in hell the execs would greenlight a film that big that stayed true to Evangelion.
 
Instead, you can tell none of the cast have been there and it made the city look like a seedy Chinatown, probably in a set in Vancouver. There are hardly any interactions with the city they were protecting, not even with the triplets. I mean, how would a city feel to lose its heroes who have defended them (did they say 47 times?). Instead there are some familiar stereotypes...

Toronto.

Saw the movie twice yesterday, 2D then Imax 3D. Pros and cons of both, like usual. But I definitely would've preferred the 2D image on an Imax screen with the usual sound that comes with it. Don't get me wrong, the 3D was pretty good, but it just doesn't hold up that well with fast scenes, so thank you Del Toro for not having too much shaky cam.

It helped that the theater I was at randomly had the film revert to 2D for a few mins during the fight scene between Raleigh and Mako, it was so clean and crisp. Then the detail kind of drained when it went back to 3D.

I don't have too many problems with the movie. Cherno and Crimson were just throwaways which did kind of suck. I do wish the film was a bit longer to cover some of the stuff seen in the comic, how the Jaeger program started, Stacker and Tendo's past, etc.
 
Meh, it's probably for the better. To do an Evangelion film justice they'd need to have a big-ass budget like Pacific Rim and there's no chance in hell the execs would greenlight a film that big that stayed true to Evangelion.

Pretty much.

Those that fund the films didnt think giant robot movies were worth the cost. It's not Gainax's fault, they dont have the money to make an international live-action movie.

But its pretty hard to make an Evangelion film now even if you had the money without people calling it a Pacific Rim rip-off, like it would be making a Ghost in the Shell film with all the Matrix rip-offs you'd get.
 
Came out of the movie, still buzzing. The 3D was good too (my first one with contacts I might add :D)
But over all my favorite scene was the young Mako "This is just a memory." thing.

EDIT/Theory: Why was that baby Kaiju the only visible one with human-esque eyes during the film, aside from the eye in the background near the end? Was it created when that weird tongue came down and prodded around the scientist? Is a hybrid kaiju possible? ._.
 
Came out of the movie, still buzzing. The 3D was good too (my first one with contacts I might add :D)
But over all my favorite scene was the young Mako "This is just a memory." thing.

Yeah, liked that scene, especially when young Mako raises her hand in fear and adult Mako
does the same while prepping the plasma canon.
 
I saw it yesterday at the first showing with eight other people (including the one who accompanied me who ended up with similar views to myself by the end) I must admit that I ended up not enjoying the movie at all. I know this is quite an unpopular opinion in here so perhaps I simply wasn't the target audience.

I came into the movie expecting it to be quite dumb with a huge emphasis on action (which itself would be incredible) and everything else to be pretty terrible. Even with those expectations, I ended up quite disappointed. After the opening until the Hong Kong action sequence (which was absolutely magnificent) I was quite bored as the movie (although, one thing I do have to say is that the young Mako scene was rather good, probably due to the actor they used) plodded along with its mostly paper-thin characters, poor dialogue and predictable plot. The comic relief scientists ended up more cringe-worthy than humorous and each appearance of theirs brought about a longing for the scene to quickly end as opposed to sustaining a sense of entertainment. As a result of all of this, I felt no sense of tension (which negatively impacted the battle sequence as amazing as it otherwise was), and no feeling of 'fun' or entertainment at all; it all just seemed incredibly dull. The Hong Kong sequence was, by far, my highlight of the movie but following that, my experience was mostly the same as it was prior; the final action sequence was underwhelming in comparison to me but it was still an enjoyable, well shot sequence. One thing that certainly deserves commendation though is the design, use of colour and cinematography throughout the movie, all of which were absolutely stunning.

I know that seems to be an unpopular opinion, and I am willing to give the movie a second chance on Blu-Ray, so I probably won't stay in this thread too much longer (I am glad to see just how many people enjoyed it though) but my biggest problem, I guess, is that everything in between the battle sequence felt dire to me, with no entertainment value to myself at all which negated any feeling of fun that I may have otherwise had. I know that this was partly what I expected going into the movie (everything outside of the action sequence to be terrible) but I had not expected so much of the movie to be focused on it and the action sequences to be so short (or perhaps they just felt short to me when placed between everything else in the plot).

In short, I guess my feelings were: Visually an amazing movie and incredible action sequences but they were far too short to compensate for everything else which I felt was dire and dropped momentum like Gypsy Danger on the beach. I am still glad people are enjoying it though, as I've said, perhaps it just wasn't for me; maybe my opinion of it will improve over time.

EDIT: Actually one thing I also have to say is that I like how they glossed over the backstory (even though I felt that it probably could have been integrated better rather than just dumping most of the information at the beginning but it ultimately doeesn't really matter) in the beginning to prevent it feeling like an origin story, moving straight into the plot of the film.

EDIT 2: Also, I really hope word of mouth carries this movie as I really do wish to see Guillermo Del Toro's "At the Mountain of Madness".

EDIT 3: Wow, reading this again and it's much more poorly written than I had initially believed; my apologies for that, I'll try fix it immediately. And done. It still isn't nicely written, nor is the structure particularly good, but hopefully it's better than it initially was.
 
Spoiler thread? Spoiler thread!!!!!

Okay, so did anyone think it was like... a MASSIVE WASTE that the only fight in the entire movie with the most colorful mechs ended up being yet-another-night-fight-in-the-water like 3-4 other of the fights in the movie? I really wish they set that fight in the early evening, and then progress towards the night for the Gipsy Danger fight in the city itself (which was really cool).

I imagine all this night fighting was due to budget. Less detail required during the night means less money spent. Hopefully the movie makes a shit ton of money and we get more daytime sequences in the sequel.

Edit: If this loses to Grown Ups 2 my faith in humanity is lost.

I have a feeling this will comeback to beat it in its second week. Word of mouth is strong.
 
I've quite liked it.
The amount of attention that went into robots almost made it feel like a waste they didn't get a bit of a personality (don't need them to talk, maybe something Eva style). Especially since the leads performances were so bland on top of it...
Still overall a thumbs up, minus the ending.

Timbuktu said:
Oblivion
. That's just from this year as well. It's either the nuke or they would infect the alien hive mind with some kind of 'virus' and give them a 'cold', also from from Independence Day, with the borg and dominion in trek.
Battlefield Earth :P
And I think that's the most fitting mention because this ending really brings down every one of those movies (except BE of course).

Though at least
Oblivion redeemed itself by Hal9000 being the alien
.
 
The movie was good, though I don't think I have ever seen a movie with such predictable plots before, lol. I guessed the entire plot of the movie after the dude reached Hong Kong, turned out I hit every single bullet points right down to the climax.

Great action, feels like this is really a first worthy step for Mechakind. Still think the movie can do without 2 pilots neurolink gimmick. Well, great action, but I wish there were more. Crimson Typhoon needs more screen time.
 
I've quite liked it.
The amount of attention that went into robots almost made it feel like a waste they didn't get a bit of a personality (don't need them to talk, maybe something Eva style). Especially since the leads performances were so bland on top of it...
Still overall a thumbs up, minus the ending.


Battlefield Earth :P
And I think that's the most fitting mention because this ending really brings down every one of those movies (except BE of course).

Though at least
Oblivion redeemed itself by Hal9000 being the alien
.
Disagree, Gypsy had a lot of character/personality at least.
 
quite disappointing show because other jaegers go down too easily. the best part is the hk battle. the undersea scene looks cool, cat5 sounds good but alas all went un-utilised. 6.5/10.

I wish de toro would take lessons from whelon so there will be more screen time action for the others mechs beside gypsy danger. I wont mind a sequel but cut the human fats, put more jaeger with super hidden weapon actions against the evil kaju. just imagine cumulating to a inter-dimensional final battle in a de toro style backdrop...yummy!
 
Doubt they could fit all that in one sequel, but a Pacific Rim series perhaps...

Forget sequel. Give me a prequel set at the dawn of the Kaiju War. Show the beginnings of the Jaeger program, the fall of cities, the defeat of the first Kaiju, the rise of Kaiju culture - the museums, the blackmarket, the toys, the groupies. Show the Jaeger pilots becoming rockstars. Basically, give me a 2 hour version of the first 15 minutes of the movie, and I'll be happy! :D

Make Ron Perlman the lead character building his empire.
 
Saw it last night and liked it a lot. It was really goofy sometimes and I wasn't expecting that. The monster fights were great though and that's what really matters.

7.8/10
 
I saw it yesterday at the first showing with eight other people (including the one who accompanied me who ended up with similar views to myself by the end) I must admit that I ended up not enjoying the movie at all which I know is quite an unpopular opinion in here so perhaps I simply wasn't the target audience. I came into the movie expecting it to be quite dumb, with a huge emphasis on action (which itself would be incredible) and everything else to be pretty terrible. Even with those expectations, I ended up quite disappointed. After the opening until the Hong Kong action sequence (which was absolutely magnificent) I was quite bored as the movie (although, one thing I do have to say is that the young Mako scene was rather good, probably due to the actor they used) plodded along with its mostly paper-thin character, poor dialogue and predictable plot. The comic relief scientists ended up more cringe-worthy than humorous and each appearance of theirs brought about a desire for the scene to quickly end as opposed to sustaining a sense of entertainment. As a result of all of this, I got no sense of tension (which negatively impacted the battle sequence as amazing as it was), no feeling of 'fun' or entertainment at all as it felt incredibly dull. The Hong Kong sequence was, by far, my highlight of the movie and following that, my experience was mostly the same as it was prior to that sequence; the final action sequence was underwhelming to me but was still pretty great. One thing that certainly deserves commendation though is the design, use of colour and cinematography throughout the movie, all of which was absolutely superb.

I know this is likely an unpopular opinion, and I am willing to give the movie a second chance on Blu-Ray, so I probably won't stay in this thread too much longer (I am glad to see just how many people enjoyed it though) but my biggest problem, I guess, is that everything in between the battle sequence felt dire to me, with no entertainment value to myself at all which negated any feeling of fun that I may have otherwise had. I know that this was partly what I expected going into the movie (everything outside of the action sequence to be terrible) but I had not expected so much of the movie to be focused on it and the action sequences to be so short (or perhaps they just felt short to me when placed between everything else in the plot).

In short, I guess my feelings were: Visually an amazing movie and incredible action sequences but they were far too short to compensate for everything else which I felt was dire and dropped momentum like Gypsy Danger on the beach. I am still glad people are enjoying it though, as I've said, perhaps it just wasn't for me; maybe my opinion of it will improve over time.

EDIT: Actually one thing I also have to say is that I like how they glossed over the backstory (even though I felt that it probably could have been integrated better rather than just dumping most of the information at the beginning but it ultimately doeesn't really matter) in the beginning to prevent it feeling like an origin story, moving straight into the plot of the film.

EDIT 2: Also, I really hope word of mouth carries this movie as I really do wish to see Guillermo Del Toro's "At the Mountain of Madness".

This is pretty much exactly how I feel.
 
One thing I didn't get, isn't Gypsy Danger supposed to be the only "analog, nuclear" Jaeger? Then how come the Striker Eureka can blow itself up with a nuclear explosion?
It's also ridiculous that no one in the decade of Kaiju attacks thought of putting a nuke inside a Kaiju carcass and send it down the portal, but that doesn't bother me obviously, it's a fantasy world where world governments are idiotic enough to build walls to keep Kaiju out.
 
One thing I didn't get, isn't Gypsy Danger supposed to be the only "analog, nuclear" Jaeger? Then how come the Striker Eureka can blow itself up with a nuclear explosion?
It's also ridiculous that no one in the decade of Kaiju attacks thought of putting a nuke inside a Kaiju carcass and send it down the portal, but that doesn't bother me obviously, it's a fantasy world where world governments are idiotic enough to build walls to keep Kaiju out.

They strapped a nuclear bomb to the Jaeger.
 
I loved the movie, it had it's flaws - some pretty annoying ones, but I think it's up there with the avengers in terms of giving me nerd chills and showing me something I've probably dreamed of seeing since I was a little kid.

In terms of the flaws, it's pretty much the ones everybody else has mentioned - they focused too much on the most generic (and imo the most boring) jaeger - those other pilots looked bad-ass and while seeing them get torn to sheds was emotional, I'd have liked to of seen them kicking some arse too - it felt like too much of the back-story came from character monologues rather than showing it to us.

I guess that leads on to the second issue - a couple of the fights are pure unadulterated awesomeness, but others I found hard to follow - very short fast sequences, in the dark or underwater, it was all a bit 'transformers' where you know something awesome is going on but don't quite know what!

In reality I accept both of these flaws are really just down to budget, It's clear that they knew how to build up these awesome characters and the highlight fights are incredible - it's just sad they didn't have the budget to tie all together a bit more, the movie is brilliant but being teased with the possibility of tag-team fights then having it curtailed is a major bummer.

Going to see it again in 3D, as a sequel with an increased budget could easily be the best thing ever made.

Also I loved the mix of races and languages used in the movie.. a bit random but, well, made me smile.
 
The movie was good, though I don't think I have ever seen a movie with such predictable plots before, lol. I guessed the entire plot of the movie after the dude reached Hong Kong, turned out I hit every single bullet points right down to the climax.

Great action, feels like this is really a first worthy step for Mechakind. Still think the movie can do without 2 pilots neurolink gimmick. Well, great action, but I wish there were more. Crimson Typhoon needs more screen time.

You also knew the plot to Avatar before you walked in theater. "Plot" seems like such a weird criticism for the type of movie. Were people expecting Lawrence of Arabia?

The link thing actually worked for me; it looked atrocious in the trailers. It was basically an excuse to have two human speaking face to face. It also led to the only credible dramatic scene in the movie so it was worth it.
 
Just came back from a 3D showing. WHY THE FUCK HAVE WE NOT HAD A LIVE ACTION EVANGELION MOVIE YET!? ARGGHHHH!

After seeing this I'd rather not. I think Hollywood has its own formula when it comes to big blockbuster films like this. So while I like the action scenes, I just don't like how they tend to treat the characters and dialogues in major production like this.
 
I loved the movie, it had it's flaws - some pretty annoying ones, but I think it's up there with the avengers in terms of giving me nerd chills and showing me something I've probably dreamed of seeing since I was a little kid.

In terms of the flaws, it's pretty much the ones everybody else has mentioned - they focused too much on the most generic (and imo the most boring) jaeger - those other pilots looked bad-ass and while seeing them get torn to sheds was emotional, I'd have liked to of seen them kicking some arse too - it felt like too much of the back-story came from character monologues rather than showing it to us.

I guess that leads on to the second issue - a couple of the fights are pure unadulterated awesomeness, but others I found hard to follow - very short fast sequences, in the dark or underwater, it was all a bit 'transformers' where you know something awesome is going on but don't quite know what!

In reality I accept both of these flaws are really just down to budget, It's clear that they knew how to build up these awesome characters and the highlight fights are incredible - it's just sad they didn't have the budget to tie all together a bit more, the movie is brilliant but being teased with the possibility of tag-team fights then having it curtailed is a major bummer.

Going to see it again in 3D, as a sequel with an increased budget could easily be the best thing ever made.

Also I loved the mix of races and languages used in the movie.. a bit random but, well, made me smile.

Funny this movie made me think of the Avengers as well. I guess mostly because the quality of the writing and acting in the Avengers is so much better.
 
I SEENT IT. Breakdown time.

+ Art direction. The designs for the robots and overall setting were really impressive and distinctive. The evil dimension was a very awe-inspiring moment, you don't get to travel to places like that often in movies. Hong Kong kind of looked like a cheap set, but I though the kaiju skull temple was really neat. I loved how rich the colors were. I know people are complaining it looked too dark, but that also made the splashes of color stand out even more. This is a great film to see in IMAX. Even the first shot of all the stars was really great on the IMAX screen.

+Action. DID YOU SEE HER PULL OUT THAT SWORD? The action was really brutal and exciting. I was really invested in what was happening and every blow seemed like both combatants were fighting for their life, a far cry from the ballerina fight scenes we often get. The Hong Kong fight was really incredible and definitely the high point of the film. Even the stick fight was better than I expected. If you wanted to see robots fight giant monsters... well, you got it.

+Lore. Overall I thought the whole lore and backstory to the movie were really interesting. How the Jaegers work, what the monsters are, why they're coming through the portal etc. was all pretty interesting. It's a really well-developed idea, and I'd like to see more entries into this world.

- Characters. The main guy was super generic and the movie was filled with action movie cliches. Jerk rival. Nerdy scientist. Scummy black market guy. Hot action chick. We get a lot of thought provoking ideas, like how characters share their memories, but the characters are so one note that it's very underutilized. The idea that both GD pilots lost people important to them is great, but then they throw in very childish "omg he's so hot" moments. I though the scientist's subplot had a lot of interesting things, like how they mentally connect with the monsters, but both of the scientists were such caracatures that the audience couldn't even digest what they were saying. Elba's character was the most complex and easily the best one, but everyone else was just there to fill up the plot.

-More diverse kaiju. Overall I though the kaiju were pretty cool, but I wish they were more diverse outside of being super dinosaurs (which they literally are). It would be nice to see crazier, Evangelion like monsters with unique and unpredicable powers, which make fights more tense and add a more intelligent angle to how they fight monsters outside of "we should punch/shoot this one to death."

-Gipsy Danger is a stupid name for a robot.

So it basically boils down to pretty and intense, but everyone in the robots and watching them are dull and cliche. I would definitely recommend it as an action movie though, but I was disappointed that they didn't really capitalize on the more thought-provoking aspects.

Also that scene where Elba slowly rises out of the mech with the sun setting behind him looked like a scene GAF would write.
 
Now that the movies sunk in I have a few questions..

If the rift opened in one specific spot, why could the kaiju appear seemingly at random? seems like they should just of camped the rift and nuked everything that came out of it or am I missing something.

Was the rift opened on purpose or not? at the start it makes you think it's by fluke and then aliens come pouring through it kind of unintentionally - but then later on it states that the aliens opened it before which makes me wonder why nuking it would make any difference when they can seemingly just open it right back up.

How come at the start of the movie they filled the helmets up with some yellow ooze when they got them into the suits, but then didn't do it again all the other times?

and most importantly of all..

why the hell are they not releasing any damn toys/comics/merchandise here in the UK!
 
In a sense, Pacific Rim is the best live-action anime I've ever seen. Everything, from characters to cinematography reminded me of old Mecha anime, but without being overtly referential.

Also just ordered the prequel graphic novel, Pacific Rim: Tales From Year Zero from Amazon.
 
How come at the start of the movie they filled the helmets up with some yellow ooze when they got them into the suits, but then didn't do it again all the other times?

I think this fluid was some kinda anti-radiation thing. They upgraded Gipsy so it was no longer needed.
 
God I loved this movie.

It's so stupid but I say that as praise, because big monster movies should be stupid to a certain extent. I was incredibly impressed by Del Toro's ability to get the scale of the Jaegers and the Kaiju over at times. Like whenever they had shots of the helicopters carrying a Jaeger, dropping it into the sea and then it would sloooowly walk forward, it looked really hefty. Same when they'd swing for a punch. Kinda hard to explain, but contrast to something like Transformers where the robots could be any size, you'd never really get any sense of weight from them.

I also found the fights shockingly easy to follow, although that was likely due to the fact they were usually 1 vs. 1 (or 2 vs. 2 on occasion), not all out Kaiju vs. Jaeger war with like a dozen on each side. The bright blue blood from the Kaiju and orange from broken Jaeger also helped to differentiate them.

I don't really get criticisms of the characters, to be honest, but I had no expectations (except that it'd be over the top and it was). Gypsy Danger was the reeeeeal protagonist of the film, like an old car. Just had personality about it. My main man Idris was also pretty cool, probably should have been chomping on a cigar and I lost my damn mind when he stepped out of the Jaeger in the flashback. I thought the little girl in those scenes was really good.

Enjoyed Sean Slater from Eastenders being Fake Australian. He's getting a lot of work these days. It's his acting from Dream Team that did it.
 
Now that the movies sunk in I have a few questions..

If the rift opened in one specific spot, why could the kaiju appear seemingly at random? seems like they should just of camped the rift and nuked everything that came out of it or am I missing something.

Was the rift opened on purpose or not? at the start it makes you think it's by fluke and then aliens come pouring through it kind of unintentionally - but then later on it states that the aliens opened it before which makes me wonder why nuking it would make any difference when they can seemingly just open it right back up.

How come at the start of the movie they filled the helmets up with some yellow ooze when they got them into the suits, but then didn't do it again all the other times?

and most importantly of all..

why the hell are they not releasing any damn toys/comics/merchandise here in the UK!

1: The tech required to track the Kaiju from the rift on likely wasn't in place until the later years. They could probably pick up the Kaiju initially with sonar buoys in place but once they left the vicinity of the rift they'd disappear until being detected on approach to population centers.

2: Rift was opened on purpose twice, once during the time of the dinosaurs and then in modern times. Nuking it initially made no difference because the bombs weren't going through. Difference at the end of the film was Gypsy rode a Kaiju to the other side, detonating its core on the apparatus used to creature the fissure, at the very least delaying the alien ability to create a second... at least until a sequel, maybe.

3: Like a lot of science fiction tech in movies/shows they show stuff like that the first time, or first few times, to show the process. After that they feel that the audience knows of its existence so they can save some time and not need to show it any more. Plus it only seemed to apply to Gypsy Danger and possibly the Australian one. I don't remember if the Chinese mech had the closed helmets, and the Russian one definitely did not... which seemed like a crucial flaw to me for a weapon system that starts a battle in the OCEAN!
 
Fantastic movie in 3D!

I get the sorrow that is felt with Cherno Alpha and Crimson Typhoon. Why did they go down?
- Class 4 Kaiju
- 2 of them
- Emp Blast (Unknown tactic)
- Last remaining 4 Mark 1-5 Jaegers: Assumption - Kaiju's are just becoming bigger/badder/better then Jaegers)
- Hive Mind Mentality/Genetic Encoding: Assumption - this explains why Kaiju's are getting harder to kill. If the Hive is constantly fed data of it's opponents, then a Kaiju can evolve/adapt/be genetically altered to bring forth a defense/attack mechanism against what is in it's environment that it needs to survive against.

From what I could put together, there wasn't any information on multiple Kaiju coming out from the rift before hand. That was the setup for the ending, that it was and will increase from 1 -> 2 -> 3 -> etc etc. Knowing this, I would say most of these Jaeger's with great pilots could take out aClass 1-3 Kaiju single handedly.

But 2 evolved Class 4's? Fuck that, you're dead already.
 
I liked it, but I had a lot of trouble with the script. The story in and of itself was great, and the action/cg was amazing, but I remember laughing at parts of the script I probably shouldn't have been laughing at.
 
Now that the movies sunk in I have a few questions..

If the rift opened in one specific spot, why could the kaiju appear seemingly at random? seems like they should just of camped the rift and nuked everything that came out of it or am I missing something.

Was the rift opened on purpose or not? at the start it makes you think it's by fluke and then aliens come pouring through it kind of unintentionally - but then later on it states that the aliens opened it before which makes me wonder why nuking it would make any difference when they can seemingly just open it right back up.

They don't appear at random. They attack cities on the Pacific Rim. Hence the title. Every city which is attacked is coastal in nature and accessible from the Pacific Ocean. Camping the rift probably doesn't work because once they're detected they're generally on the move towards a target already. The only ones who were lurking at the rift were the ones guarding it at the end.

As for the rift reopening.... well..... sequel opportunity. Lol.
 
When the guy went into the rift, there were some aliens hanging out, but they looked much smaller than the other kaiju, like human sizes. Is that right?
 
God I loved this movie.

It's so stupid but I say that as praise, because big monster movies should be stupid to a certain extent. I was incredibly impressed by Del Toro's ability to get the scale of the Jaegers and the Kaiju over at times. Like whenever they had shots of the helicopters carrying a Jaeger, dropping it into the sea and then it would sloooowly walk forward, it looked really hefty. Same when they'd swing for a punch. Kinda hard to explain, but contrast to something like Transformers where the robots could be any size, you'd never really get any sense of weight from them.

I also found the fights shockingly easy to follow, although that was likely due to the fact they were usually 1 vs. 1 (or 2 vs. 2 on occasion), not all out Kaiju vs. Jaeger war with like a dozen on each side. The bright blue blood from the Kaiju and orange from broken Jaeger also helped to differentiate them.

I don't really get criticisms of the characters, to be honest, but I had no expectations (except that it'd be over the top and it was). Gypsy Danger was the reeeeeal protagonist of the film, like an old car. Just had personality about it. My main man Idris was also pretty cool, probably should have been chomping on a cigar and I lost my damn mind when he stepped out of the Jaeger in the flashback. I thought the little girl in those scenes was really good.

Enjoyed Sean Slater from Eastenders being Fake Australian. He's getting a lot of work these days. It's his acting from Dream Team that did it.

Hah, yeah, I enjoyed his character in the film. His role in True Blood currently is meaty as well.
 
When the guy went into the rift, there were some aliens hanging out, but they looked much smaller than the other kaiju, like human sizes. Is that right?

Yes the ID4 alien ripoffs are the actual colonists trying to destroy the human race. The kaiju are just their cloned monster army used for the invasion.
 
As for the rift reopening.... well..... sequel opportunity. Lol.

Possibly, but the nuke went off in the faces of the dudes on the other side. Of course what we don't know is how much that would have set them back from trying again, or if they even would attempt it.

Enjoyed Sean Slater from Eastenders being Fake Australian. He's getting a lot of work these days. It's his acting from Dream Team that did it.

Just wish they hadn't bothered with the accent. We know he can be a nasty little shit so just let him go at it.
 
Possibly, but the nuke went off in the faces of the dudes on the other side. Of course what we don't know is how much that would have set them back from trying again, or if they even would attempt it.

I'm sure the alien race on a whole survived the nuclear bomba at the end. I'm not so sure if they'll survive the financial bomba though. :(
 
Yes the ID4 alien ripoffs are the actual colonists trying to destroy the human race. The kaiju are just their cloned monster army used for the invasion.

When we first saw the evil aliens, I was hoping the twist would be that they are actually piloting the kaiju via some sort of organic connection. And if this was a Miyazaki film the aliens would only be invading because pollution is seeping into their dimension and they are just trying to protect themselves. The movie ends with Gypsy Danger standing on a grass hill as the wind softly blows by.
 
Funny this movie made me think of the Avengers as well. I guess mostly because the quality of the writing and acting in the Avengers is so much better.

This is true for me. I think mostly because the humor in Avengers is not too over-the-top. I just can't handle characters like Newt and Hannibal Chau. A smart-ass one liners from Ironman and occasional self-reference joke from Cap I can handle but completely comedic character with speech mannerism is a bit too much for me.

I also think Avengers had a lot of advantage because they managed to develop most of the characters in their own individual film. So by the time the action is on in the Avengers, you already care about the characters. And the actors in The Avengers are far more talented than the ones they have here. I just realized how little credit I gave to Evans, Hemsworth and Scarlett when I saw Avengers.

As for this film, I honestly am kind of depressed that I didn't enjoy this film. I hyped it a bit to some of my friends and one of them is a student on a budget. I don't want him to go watch something that he may not like and waste his money. But he kind of wanted to see it with me next week. Hopefully if I don't mention it he will forget about wanting to see this.
 
Possibly, but the nuke went off in the faces of the dudes on the other side. Of course what we don't know is how much that would have set them back from trying again, or if they even would attempt it.



Just wish they hadn't bothered with the accent. We know he can be a nasty little shit so just let him go at it.

According to the scientist they travel from planet to planet - so if you think about it, they must already have built one of these devices on every planet they've conquered in order to have moved on to the next.
 
Man that was bullshit that we only saw Coyote Tango for a split second in Mako's memory. That was Coyote Tango, right?
 
According to the scientist they travel from planet to planet - so if you think about it, they must already have built one of these devices on every planet they've conquered in order to have moved on to the next.

Is that not assuming they attack the next planet from the last conquered one, rather than attacking from one central base of operations?
 
Well to be fair I don't think the kaiju looked particularly good in the daylight.

You know, I know it would be hard to follow for the audience, but having pilots tell each other instructions make zero sense when their minds are already synced up no?
 
Well to be fair I don't think the kaiju looked particularly good in the daylight.

You know, I know it would be hard to follow for the audience, but having pilots tell each other instructions make zero sense when their minds are already synced up no?

I thought they were instructing the AI of the machine what attack to start, since they can't really press buttons when wearing those movement mimicking exoskeleton thingies.

Edit: But I suppose the girl did trigger that shockwave just by holding her arm up, maybe some of them are kinect enabled ;)
 
I thought they were instructing the AI of the machine what attack to start, since they can't really press buttons when wearing those movement mimicking exoskeleton thingies.

Edit: But I suppose the girl did trigger that shockwave just by holding her arm up, maybe some of them are kinect enabled ;)

The ice spray was triggered by a button press on the console if I recall.


The whole cockpit setup is kinda a mess really. More designed for it to work for the particular scene over it working in real life, but rocket elbow. :D
 
So I have a question about Mako: She looked like she was 5 years old or something when Pentecost rescued her and adopted her. He brought her up. He's a British dude who heads an international organization fighting monsters. Everyone in this organization seems to communicate in English. Mako is supposed to be... what.... 20ish in the film? She's been brought up by a British dude for 15 years, why the hell is her English so bad?! Why does she still speak with a heavy accent?! Lol. :)
 
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