The Cretan
Member
Ok, cool. Thanks. And why is this one R?
A middle finger and some words like fuck, I think.
Ok, cool. Thanks. And why is this one R?
A middle finger and some words like fuck, I think.
A middle finger and some words like fuck, I think.
And Affleck's butt.
I watched the ultimate version last night with my wife and we both thought it was epic and amazing. I love how heavy the whole thing is. Never saw it in theaters.I watched this last night with my wife, who didn't see it in the theatre.
It's definitely more fleshed out, but still too long, not fun and too damn serious.
[KoRp]Jazzman;211343037 said:Finally watched it last night as I wasn't really big on seeing it in theaters, so we watched the ultimate version, and I didn't mind it at all. Though I will say i went in with very low expectations so that could be the reason for thinking its ok.
That being said, Eisenberg's Lex is just awful, and it feels so forced that they had to make him be socially awkward/autistic because he's super smart. Affleck was actually really good in the role as was Gadot for how little she was in it. I will say I don't love that Batman uses guns and seemingly indirectly kills everyone in a fight, just seems to like a cop out to make him edgier and dark.
Gotta say though, might give JL a shot in the theater though now after this.
I need to apologize to all Superman fans.
First of, I don't think Zack is especially great with characters. He has always issues in potraying them. But when I watch his movies, I can see the idea behind it and I like it most of the time. Execution is lacking.
To me, Superman doesn't work. He is lame. At least in most of his comics and animated movies. I think it was a great way to introduce this kinda Superman to the movieverse, in these times. I appreciate when superheroes struggle, because deep down, Superman might have godlike powers, but he always be a human. And humans struggle with life.
Again, execution is not hit or miss with Snyder, but I really liked Man of Steel. It brought the character of Superman closer to me - and I even read a lot of comics since them.
I can live with this arc. Points that are blank I fill in my head. I will greatly appreciate when Superman returns to save to world in Justice League and that will give me a huge smile in my face. He has no reason to be that Superman he was in MoS and BvS. He has become an ideal, humanity can strive for. Just like his kryptonian daddy always said.
So, let us all be a little more optimistic and less stigmatizing.
There's a way to make Superman less of a "boring blue scout" character (I disagree with that, but that's for another time), and more of a human. But the problem in BvS is that the conflict doesn't really go anywhere, and stays in limbo: Superman struggles with responsibility > still ends up doing what he does while not really changing public opinion. Also, the resolution of the conflict is equally shitty. Superman dies and now the world feels sorry for him for no reason other than obligation, because there's no pathway that's shown where the audience shifts from being 50/50 to fully appreciating Superman. It's pretty jarring and unbelievable.
Also, I disagree that he has become the ideal in death. Superman died in a time where everyone was split about him, and he didn't really do anything to mimic his father's words. At least as it pertains to uniting people. Furthermore, people didn't really strive for his ideal. The people that were positive on him, relied on him to solve their problems instead of relishing in his positivity to become better people. In fact, you could argue that he hasn't really changed the world in the way that Jor-El thought he would.
Who was the guy saying "am I too soon?" What was that all about?
One think noticed when we first meet Alfred he doesn't like Bruce new methods of criminal hunting it sounds like Bruce actually never used to kill until recently. Way Alfred talks it like brutal Bats is a new thing due to Metropolis incident and fear (cue that speech about fear and rage).
Yes that is exactly what's happening in this movie. It's amazing to me how many of my real life friends who happen to be pretty big movie buffs watched this movie recently and didn't pick up on the clues the movie was giving. It's like everything in today's movies needs to be spelled out through explicit character dialog.
One think noticed when we first meet Alfred he doesn't like Bruce new methods of criminal hunting it sounds like Bruce actually never used to kill until recently. Way Alfred talks it like brutal Bats is a new thing due to Metropolis incident and fear (cue that speech about fear and rage).
I would agree if:Yes that is exactly what's happening in this movie. It's amazing to me how many of my real life friends who happen to be pretty big movie buffs watched this movie recently and didn't pick up on the clues the movie was giving. It's like everything in today's movies needs to be spelled out through explicit character dialog.
Yes that is exactly what's happening in this movie. It's amazing to me how many of my real life friends who happen to be pretty big movie buffs watched this movie recently and didn't pick up on the clues the movie was giving. It's like everything in today's movies needs to be spelled out through explicit character dialog.
Just because something is in the movie doesn't mean it's presented well. This is doubly true for the theatrical cut that didn't have a hobo give explicit character dialogue to Clark about how Batman has changed. The absence of that scene makes it incredibly ambiguous how much his methods had actually escalated. What makes it even muddier is how there's ZERO immediate change in Bruce's methods after he flip flops on his murder quest which raises the question of how much actually changed for him following the Black Zero Event. The only change we see is at the end when he decides not to brand Lex, which is additionally a narrative mess because the bat brand was a death sentence that was enacted by Lex himself. Bruce knew his brand was killing criminals but did he know Lex was pulling the trigger? In that case, wouldn't the brand effectively no longer be a death sentence if performed on Lex? But if he doesn't know that, and we have no reason to believe he does, then Bruce refraining from branding Lex is an empty gesture since it wouldn't have led to his death anyway. But why happily kill all the mercs but not the man truly responsible? Oh, because we need him for sequels. That's literally the only logical reason and has nothing to do with his character arc. The whole thing is just inconsistent and poorly executed.
Correct.
When does Bruce decide to stop killing thugs? In the jail cell with Lex? Because it sure wasn't when he was going to save / saving Martha.
We the audience won't know if Bruce has changed his ways until JL.
I would agree if:
A) The movie didn't clearly link his escalation to the branding element. Him not branding Lex at the end speaks to this specifically.
B) The Robin outfit on display wasn't holding a halberd implying Robin was probably killing dudes with an axe when he was active too.
"Men are still good. We fight. We kill. We betray one another. But we can do better. We have to."
That's from the same guy at the beginning of the movie who shrugged off Alfred saying he was taking things too far. You don't get much more obvious. The only thing he could have done to be more obvious he was going to walk a better path was if he just blatantly said, "I'll minimize as many deaths as possible in the future."
People love to point at the deaths during the Martha rescue but it's been explained over and over that it was Superman's sacrifice that inspired Bruce. I'm not sure why that has to continuously be explained. My 8 year old figured that out on the first watch. I have hard time buying "it wasn't presented well" with that in mind.
Inspired Bruce to form the JL because he believes Superman is dead, and the world is without its heavy hitter. Yes, that is obvious.
Just because something is in the movie doesn't mean it's presented well. This is doubly true for the theatrical cut that didn't have a hobo give explicit character dialogue to Clark about how Batman has changed. The absence of that scene makes it incredibly ambiguous how much his methods had actually escalated. What makes it even muddier is how there's ZERO immediate change in Bruce's methods after he flip flops on his murder quest which raises the question of how much actually changed for him following the Black Zero Event. The only change we see is at the end when he decides not to brand Lex, which is additionally a narrative mess because the bat brand was a death sentence that was enacted by Lex himself. Bruce knew his brand was killing criminals but did he know Lex was pulling the trigger? In that case, wouldn't the brand effectively no longer be a death sentence if performed on Lex? But if he doesn't know that, and we have no reason to believe he does, then Bruce refraining from branding Lex is an empty gesture since it wouldn't have led to his death anyway. But why happily kill all the mercs but not the man truly responsible? Oh, because we need him for sequels. That's literally the only logical reason and has nothing to do with his character arc. The whole thing is just inconsistent and poorly executed.
You come off as being willfully ignorant here. What does that monologue have to do with the Justice League?
You come off as being willfully ignorant here. What does that monologue have to do with the Justice League?
I actually watched the TC at release and have recently bought the UC (because hey I have Man of Steel and I kinda liked it so why not pick that also).Did you actually watch the movie? Literally everything is answered save possibly the last question. Not always in specifics, but via context.
In order:
- Yes, of course. Bruce has had a 20 year career, the ROBIN suit, Wayne Manor in ruins, and the like show that a lot of bad shit has gone down in that time. We don't need the specifics, he's Batman.
- To give us insight into the politics of what's going on, and show that the government is having issues figuring out how to deal with Supes.
- Answered completely in the movie, unless you didn't see the UC. It's right there.
- Completely the opposite, it's to show that Lex is manipulating things to make Bats look worse to Clark. Again, pretty much spelled out.
- Probably not, though I'm guessing it's intent was to tie in to JL later, and to be able to look back and go OH! It could have been handled a lot better.
Didn't you just answer your own question? Why did he kill the mercs but not the man responsible. His arc had completed and he no longer wanted to kill. You are making your own judgement and passing it on as fact that it was "just for the sequels". After watching Superman die he says he won't fail him in death, which I took to mean he would be a better hero.
How is it an empty gesture if, as you said, he doesn't know that the brand is no longer a death sentence? That makes no sense. If he still thinks its a death sentence, and then doesn't brand Lex, it means he is choosing not to kill everyone in his path anymore.
Yea clearly it has no bearing on forming the JL. It's about Bruce's actions.
And a newly added line in the UE just following the fight with Superman drives this point home even further
"I don't deserve you, Alfred. No Master Wayne, you don't."
Superman's sacrifice. It inspired Bruce to do exactly how? To do what?
Superman's sacrifice. It inspired Bruce to do exactly how? To do what?
I actually watched the TC at release and have recently bought the UC (because hey I have Man of Steel and I kinda liked it so why not pick that also).
The guys getting shanked in prison was Lex?
I didn't hate the movie but found some plotpoints a bit pointless, if they left that kind of info out of the TC we got the shitty version in theatre!
I didn't watch the TC and I can tell you I was sure the branding would have been a death sentence for Lex at the end!
It's not in the TC, and I suppose it has a double meaning, yeah, Alfred was probably like "I told you so"Huh, I remember that in the TC. Also I don't know if I agree with that. That seemed more like a joke to me about how awesome Alfred is. Though I suppose it could go either way.
Didn't you just answer your own question? Why did he kill the mercs but not the man responsible. His arc had completed and he no longer wanted to kill. You are making your own judgement and passing it on as fact that it was "just for the sequels". After watching Superman die he says he won't fail him in death, which I took to mean he would be a better hero.
How is it an empty gesture if, as you said, he doesn't know that the brand is no longer a death sentence? That makes no sense. If he still thinks its a death sentence, and then doesn't brand Lex, it means he is choosing not to kill everyone in his path anymore.
This makes no sense. You can't selectively kill and then simultaneously claim "see! Batman became better!" Otherwise, there's no point in suggesting he'll be a better hero if he's resorting to old habits.
He literally just answered your question.
...
The line is "men are still good, we fight, we kill...we can be better"
So seeing this dude who he thought was the enemy, who he was hating an hour ago, sacrifice his life, made him realize he can be better than a killer. How does that not make sense? Maybe you can argue that it should have been handled better or you just didn't like how they presented it. But the fact is that it's there.
Do you mean you DID watch the TC? Yes if you watch the UC, you'll see that Lex orchestrated the branding killing of at least 1 person, so we can assume he did them all. We did indeed get the shitty version in theaters lol.
Do you mean you DID watch the TC? Yes if you watch the UC, you'll see that Lex orchestrated the branding killing of at least 1 person, so we can assume he did them all. We did indeed get the shitty version in theaters lol.
This is 100% true, and I'm ok with that. I rationalize it as he killed the guys becauseWe the audience won't know if Bruce has changed his ways until JL.
The flamethrower guy is kgbeast?This is 100% true, and I'm ok with that. I rationalize it as he killed the guys with the turrets because
1- he was in a rush
2- they were clearly very bad and about to kill an old woman
3- at the end of the day most of then killed themselves (the guy with the grenade, Kgbeast using the flamethrower etc).
Meanwhile Lex's encounter was more peaceful, he was already under the watch of Justice, there was no need to kill him, and of course the police would not want that inside their cells. His change of heart would be more pronounced then too.
Makes sense to me.
The first part of the bolded was actually just repeating Guek's question, sorry if that wasn't clear. My point is that he is going to be a better hero after Superman, which is shown by him not branding Lex.
All that's really clear is that Bruce realizes after Supes' death is that, ya know, maybe heroes shouldn't be fighting each other. Not when there's a bigger threat near.
I don't think branding Lex would have meant much outside of Batman flexing. Remember, all the prisoners Batman branded got sent to a Metropolis prison (Mrs. Santos clarifies this). Batman was transferring Lex to Arkham and Lex isn't going to orchestrate his own spanking anyway. Even without the transfer there would be no more deaths because of the brand. Lex wouldn't have the power to get it done.
Edit: It's supposed to say "shanking" but I'm leaving it as is.![]()
"Men are still good. We fight. We kill. We betray one another. But we can do better. We have to."
That's from the same guy at the beginning of the movie who shrugged off Alfred saying he was taking things too far. You don't get much more obvious. The only thing he could have done to be more obvious he was going to walk a better path was if he just blatantly said, "I'll minimize as many deaths as possible in the future."
People love to point at the deaths during the Martha rescue but it's been explained over and over that it was Superman's sacrifice that inspired Bruce. I'm not sure why that has to continuously be explained. My 8 year old figured that out on the first watch. I have hard time buying "it wasn't presented well" with that in mind.
Didn't you just answer your own question? Why did he kill the mercs but not the man responsible. His arc had completed and he no longer wanted to kill. You are making your own judgement and passing it on as fact that it was "just for the sequels". After watching Superman die he says he won't fail him in death, which I took to mean he would be a better hero.
How is it an empty gesture if, as you said, he doesn't know that the brand is no longer a death sentence? That makes no sense. If he still thinks its a death sentence, and then doesn't brand Lex, it means he is choosing not to kill everyone in his path anymore.
Him not branding Lex at the end speaks to what specifically? I'm unclear on what you mean.
Alfred explicitly states that the turning point for Batman was the arrival of Superman and how it engendered a feeling of powerlessness in Bruce, changing all the rules and his prosecution of criminals. He starts branding criminals and not giving much of a shit in his search for the White Portugese.
Why is that? When Robin has traditionally been depicted with a bo staff as a weapon, why is it that him all of a sudden having a halberd makes it a stretch that he probably didn't have an issue with killing in the context of a movie where Batman has no issue with killing?The halberd is really a stretch
Well you don't get it if you don't know his real name, but yeah the movie actually used 3 comic villains.The flamethrower guy is kgbeast?
At no point in the movie is it mentioned or implied that he uses a halberd. Doesn't matter what's in the book or concept art if it isn't represented in the film.That the recent escalation was him branding criminals. Alfred throws this in front of Bruce...
...and says "New rules(?)" implying the brand is what's new. The whole brand situation is specifically what puts Batman on Clark's radar not him killing people. After "New rules" Alfred goes in to his "Fear" speech and what does he specifically say it turns people? Cruel. Yes, that could be in reference to killing, but "cruel" is not one of the first words I'd use to describe Batman killing while trying to get the job done. Using it to describe him branding criminals for no real purpose is. Him not branding Lex at the end is him completing this "cruel" arc. Maybe killing too, but nothing implies the killing part was ever an issue.
Why is that? When Robin has traditionally been depicted with a bo staff as a weapon, why is it that him all of a sudden having a halberd makes it a stretch that he probably didn't have an issue with killing in the context of a movie where Batman has no issue with killing?
The issue isn't so much over Bruce's decision to form the League. That was fine and easily understandable. The problematic aspects stem from Bruce's penchant for killing and the changes surrounding that aspect of the character. I don't think Superman's death had anything to do with that because there's no reason for it to. No overt reason anyway. It's not like Clark was above using deadly force even when he didn't have to. That's the very first thing he does in the movie! There's nothing in the movie to suggest Bruce decides to stop killing after Clark dies. There's nothing that directly contradicts that notion either so it's easy to see what you want to see. Bruce being inspired to no longer be so cynical and recognizing the need for heroes to work together against a common enemy feels pretty explicit, the rest does not.
As for the brand thing, I mean it's an empty gesture from the audience's point of view since it's now an empty threat. I'd have preferred if Bruce had branded him anyway as a constant reminder of how actions and stated he now knew Lex was behind the prison killings. Hell, how cool would it have been if he had branded him with Superman's shield insignia instead of the bat brand!
The issue isn't so much over Bruce's decision to form the League. That was fine and easily understandable. The problematic aspects stem from Bruce's penchant for killing and the changes surrounding that aspect of the character. I don't think Superman's death had anything to do with that because there's no reason for it to. No overt reason anyway. It's not like Clark was above using deadly force even when he didn't have to. That's the very first thing he does in the movie! There's nothing in the movie to suggest Bruce decides to stop killing after Clark dies. There's nothing that directly contradicts that notion either so it's easy to see what you want to see. Bruce being inspired to no longer be so cynical and recognizing the need for heroes to work together against a common enemy feels pretty explicit, the rest does not.
As for the brand thing, I mean it's an empty gesture from the audience's point of view since it's now an empty threat. I'd have preferred if Bruce had branded him anyway as a constant reminder of how actions and stated he now knew Lex was behind the prison killings. Hell, how cool would it have been if he had branded him with Superman's shield insignia instead of the bat brand!