gutter_trash
Banned
Robots fought monsters before Evangelion.
yeah like 3 decades before Evangelion ever came out
Robots fought monsters before Evangelion.
I liked it, but it was a ripoff of Evangelion with the ending ripped off from Gunbuster
I guess homage is a better word...although the ending was very similar
How in the hell is the ending similar?????
I think there is an argument to be made here. Del Toro probably would have made a better crafted movie if it were just a smaller scale tragedy about the giant tick collectors doing their job while the world ends.Those were just parasites. Giant ticks or lice (because kaiju are giant).
The Hong Kong crew were harvesting them because they were harvesting everything to process and sell.
Yeah but the whole drift handshake thing and the synchonization thing reminded me of the Synch ratio from Eva. Mainly that part. And G Gundam too. Basically a bunch of different mecha anime series stuff. It was cool seeing all of them (even if I was the only person of my friend group to recognize)
I think one thing that was glossed over was why they ever thought the wall was a good idea when you have these robots capable of crushing buildings like paper. It wasn't explained who approved that plan or why it was even used
Just saw it, amazing.
Fucking Cherno and Typhoon going down, FEELS
DAT MUSIC.
I don't know why but the jaeger/pilot's deaths, particularly Cherno's, hit me kinda hard compared to most movie characters' deaths. I think it has something to do with the combination of the typical death-of-heroes-moment emotions, their short screen time, and the fact that it shattered the sense of invincibility and safety that's often associated (at for me) with being the pilot of a mecha.
It was all strangely touching, I can't put my finger on why.
Saw it in Imax today, and I agree. The jaeger destruction and pilot deaths have a lot of gravity. From Yancy being ripped out of the cockpit in the beginning to the Cherno cockpit they did a really good job tying the personal nature of the cockpit with the large scale action going on.
I do wish they had more action shots of Cherno/Crimson Typhoon fighting before the timeline of the movie (maybe action shots leading up to the 5 year later transition), since those two Jaegers were much more visually interesting than Striker/Gipsy IMO.
I don't know why but the jaeger/pilot's deaths, particularly Cherno's, hit me kinda hard compared to most movie characters' deaths. I think it has something to do with the combination of the typical death-of-heroes-moment emotions, their short screen time, and the fact that it shattered the sense of invincibility and safety that's often associated (at for me) with being the pilot of a mecha.
It was all strangely touching, I can't put my finger on why.
For me it was when they lamented on Crimson Typhoon's defeat, "Typhoon is down, let's get those bastards!"
From there, they were also fighting for Typhoon's name and the audience naturally projects themselves onto Cherno Alpha, as you're pretty much in the same mindset as the Russian pilots - equaling wanting some vengeance/justice as they do!
Also the periodic attacks from the kaiju that escalated into more frequent ones is very similar to how Eva set their general episode/plot flow.
I am now confused as hell. Doesn't Gipsy Danger have a computer?The analog versus digital line always made me laugh because I thought it made no sense, but I saw the movie with some of my engineer friends today and when I brought it up they said it made perfect sense, so take that for what it's worth.
I thought the character fleshed out the world. One of the nice things about this film is that it establishes a large world, yet we only see a tiny part of it.Why was that character even in the movie? Could've been cut and nothing of value would have been lost.
There is a dedication to various people involved in making giant monster and giant robot fiction including Ray Harryhausen (Jason and the Argonauts) and Ishiro Honda (Godzilla).Did I miss anything at the very end of the credits ?
I fucking loved this movie.
Honestly think some people here haven't seen a Godzilla movie before. I keep reading posts to how this movie copies dumb anime like Evangelion.People complaining about the punching.
Have you seriously NEVER watched a Godzilla/Kaiju/mecha anime?
Punching giant things and causing destruction is all part of the fun.
I am now confused as hell. Doesn't Gipsy Danger have a computer?
A better explanation would have been that the Shatterdome was shielded from the EMP.
Great movie though I didn't care for how Gipsy Danger pretty much killed every Kaiju, while the other Jaegers got torn apart.
Yes! Immediately thought of Giant Robo during that sceneIt's a Giant Robo reference so if you've seen that classic anime OVA, it makes a bit more sense.
Deleted scenes only, no different cut.
I realize some of the actors were intentionally hamming it up, but they just went way too far. That scientist with the cane was the worst. His scenes were like something out of the Shumacher Batman films. Ron Perlman and Clifton Collins Jr, who are usually great, don't fair much better. Raleigh and Mako were both really wooden and awkward, but would've been passable if they had some decent dialogue to work with.
The script is the biggest problem though. The exposition is so insanely clunky throughout. I didn't mind the huge info dump at the start. It's not ideal, but I understand that they just want to set up this world so they can get right into the story. But then it keeps happening throughout. At one point Charlie Day says to Ron Perlman, "Now as we both know, Kaiju have two brains..." If you both know it, then why are you telling him?! Did the kids from Super 8 write this? Later, Ron Perlman explains that the newborn kaiju was strangled by it's umbilical cord, No shit, we just watched it happen five seconds ago.
The rest is just cliche after cliche after cliche. Did anybody not think that Idris Elba was going to sacrifice himself AS SOON as he got a nosebleed? Or that young aussie would end up having a begrudging respect for Raliegh?
I don't want to just bash the movie. It's amazing to look at. The robot/monster designs are great, the effects are astonishing, the sense of scale really IS badass. It's well shot and choreographed as well. I was also never bored. It had a nice brisk pace that I appreciated after so many overly long blockbusters.
The more I think about it, the more the movie is similar to the 1998 Godzilla movie, with just a lot better fights.
Ron Perlman, Charlie Day & scientist with the cane character could easily been in '98 Zilla with no alteration.
any news on earnings? last i heard even in international market it's doing badly? ; ;
I don't know why but the jaeger/pilot's deaths, particularly Cherno's, hit me kinda hard compared to most movie characters' deaths. I think it has something to do with the combination of the typical death-of-heroes-moment emotions, their short screen time, and the fact that it shattered the sense of invincibility and safety that's often associated (at for me) with being the pilot of a mecha.
It was all strangely touching, I can't put my finger on why.
I can't imagine the Typhoon bit doing the movie any favors in China.So, how's Pacific Rim holding up finance-wise?
Surely this will explode in Japan and China?
It doesn't help that their death are pretty one sided. Cherno being helplessy crushed down and their pilot drowning really hit me hard. Seeing struggling underwater before getting crushed reallly hit me hard. Same for Typhoon, the wide shot of the cockpit from the inside getting crushed by the Kaiju really perfectly capture the feeling of desperation from pilot's point of view. Stuck in a giant metal box... Fuck
I can't imagine the Typhoon bit doing the movie any favors in China.
Their nuclear reactor is probably heavily shielded since the pilots aren't getting those radiation nosebleeds. That would also protect the reactor from the EMP. Since the reactor would keep running, they could easily restart the rest of their systems. While the power source of the Australian mech was just dead. So it made sense. It was just presented poorly.It's a Giant Robo reference so if you've seen that classic anime OVA, it makes a bit more sense.
Basically, the idea is that all of the other Jaegers used a power source that was vulnerable to being disabled by an EMP but the Gipsy Danger used a nuclear engine making it less vulnerable to being disabled like that. Doesn't quite make as much sense because an EMP would disable the computer that controls the nuclear engine at least for awhile but eh.
I'll have to take your word for it. That fight scene was so brief and dark I couldn't see shit.But they were the only robot with three spinning blades. THREE SPINNING BLADES.
I'll have to take your word for it. That fight scene was so brief and dark I couldn't see shit.
It wasn't great to be sure. I heard the blades and kind of but not really saw them.If you couldn't see the blades, your theater had a really crappy setup.
Also it's crazy to think that humans would have the technology to build these fucking monster robots by 2015.
Could you imagine. in 2 years from now. would be awesome.
We could probably achieve a lot even now with enough money and dedication.
Problem is greedy corporate types and corrupt governments.
It wasn't great to be sure. I heard the blades and kind of but not really saw them.
It doesn't help that their death are pretty one sided. Cherno being helplessy crushed down and their pilot drowning really hit me hard. Seeing struggling underwater before getting crushed reallly hit me hard. Same for Typhoon, the wide shot of the cockpit from the inside getting crushed by the Kaiju really perfectly capture the feeling of desperation from pilot's point of view. Stuck in a giant metal box... Fuck
So out of curiosity who would win?
Godzilla or Gipsy?