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Post by Hit Girl on Jan 6, 2014 18:43:32 GMT -5
I want Harley Quinn in a Batman movie, and I want her to be played by Alison Brie.
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Post by xCompackx on Jan 6, 2014 19:07:32 GMT -5
I just want a movie that makes sense, doesn't try to shoehorn comic book references in for the sake of it, and has CGI that doesn't look like garbage.
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Post by Red Impact on Jan 6, 2014 19:34:23 GMT -5
It's pretty obvious most fans want accuracy in their adaptions. I can understand that, and that's been made clear numerous times over. But what about superhero concepts in general? That's what I'm especially curious about. Honestly, my favorite part of any Superhero movie is their first reveal as the hero, where you see them do their first acts of heroics in costume, with the reaction of the people there. When movies take that part out, I tend to think something is lost. I don't think their first actions as heroes should be fighting the main villains. Meanwhile, I hate Batman gambits from villains, when they give them this horribly convoluted plan that requires accuracy down to the second and an impossible to predict series of events. I don't mind a complex plan, but something like The Joker in The Dark Knight just makes me roll my eyes.
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Jiren
Patti Mayonnaise
Hearts Bayformers
Posts: 35,163
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Post by Jiren on Jan 6, 2014 19:37:03 GMT -5
Tim Burton's Batman movies
I thought they were the right way to do a comic movie (liberties aside), They felt like watching a comic but wasn't cheese ball (Schumaker) or Miserable (Nolan)
But not every comic characters are Batman so they shouldn't make comic characters so brooding and miserable, That why I like the Marvel movies (IM3 aside) the characters are different
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Post by 'Foretold' Joker on Jan 6, 2014 21:19:02 GMT -5
Would also like to see a set of stories that are not - 1.Origin, 2.Give Up for a bit & 3.Evil Opposite.
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Post by The Tank on Jan 6, 2014 21:47:32 GMT -5
It's pretty obvious most fans want accuracy in their adaptions. I can understand that, and that's been made clear numerous times over. But what about superhero concepts in general? That's what I'm especially curious about. Okay, I've actually got a good one here: I'm tired of superhero movies where every villain needs an hour-long backstory that endears them to the audience enough that they either have to make a last-minute face turn heroic sacrifice or they just don't die/get punished appropriately so they can be in sequels. People keep bringing this one up because it's a good idea, so here's an example: Is it too much to ask for a Spider-Man movie to open up with Shocker or one of his other lame villains getting his lights knocked out in five minutes?
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Post by Koda, Master Crunchyroller on Jan 6, 2014 22:46:54 GMT -5
It's pretty obvious most fans want accuracy in their adaptions. I can understand that, and that's been made clear numerous times over. But what about superhero concepts in general? That's what I'm especially curious about. Okay, I've actually got a good one here: I'm tired of superhero movies where every villain needs an hour-long backstory that endears them to the audience enough that they either have to make a last-minute face turn heroic sacrifice or they just don't die/get punished appropriately so they can be in sequels. People keep bringing this one up because it's a good idea, so here's an example: Is it too much to ask for a Spider-Man movie to open up with Shocker or one of his other lame villains getting his lights knocked out in five minutes? Unfortunately considering how big of a hit Loki has been with the MCU, I suspect this might become a bigger trend now.
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The Sam
El Dandy
The Brainiest Sam of all
Posts: 8,423
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Post by The Sam on Jan 6, 2014 22:53:44 GMT -5
I want a realistic, down-to-earth adaptation... that's completely off-the-wall and swarming with magic robots.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2014 23:23:07 GMT -5
Eh...honestly at this point, stop doing them.
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Post by Ryback on a Pole! on Jan 6, 2014 23:28:01 GMT -5
Faithful to the characters.
Basically, not X-Men 3 were Psylocke was a generic badguy with different powers or Wolverine: Origins were Deadpool was an entirely different character.
Also lot's of action, a good plot and a good choice of villain. I'd also quite like to see some more minor characters appear for short spells. Like the Spiderman movies; instead of showing a montage of him fighting generic thugs, have a montage showing him KOing C and D-List villains like Shocker and Chameleon and Big Wheel or whoever.
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Post by Red Impact on Jan 6, 2014 23:34:13 GMT -5
It's pretty obvious most fans want accuracy in their adaptions. I can understand that, and that's been made clear numerous times over. But what about superhero concepts in general? That's what I'm especially curious about. Okay, I've actually got a good one here: I'm tired of superhero movies where every villain needs an hour-long backstory that endears them to the audience enough that they either have to make a last-minute face turn heroic sacrifice or they just don't die/get punished appropriately so they can be in sequels. People keep bringing this one up because it's a good idea, so here's an example: Is it too much to ask for a Spider-Man movie to open up with Shocker or one of his other lame villains getting his lights knocked out in five minutes? So basically like Iron Monger in Iron Man got?
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Jan 7, 2014 2:41:41 GMT -5
Eh...honestly at this point, stop doing them. Sadly I'm with this. There's so many superhero films, it's ridiculous. Then there's this general mediocre blueprint they've seem to be taking of: Hero faces off with villain, big dialogue exchange. Hero wins but villain gets away, villain enacts grand plan. BIG HUGE BATTLE/MAJOR CITY DESTRUCTION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Hero wins. I wish someone would deviate from this formula and do something unique. I'm begging for a Batman film centered around an actual mystery where he has use his detective skills to save the day. Like a night in Gotham where we follow him. In fact, I had an idea that Batman needs to be treated as a superhero version of the James Bond franchise where each film is a standalone story with a thread of continuity that weaves through them. But other than a few upcoming films, many of the recent outings have fallen under the "yeah... It's okay, I guess" category.
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