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@Darth Meow 504: Actually it looked like two superstrong video game characters engaged in combat.

I love Gattaca. It's like a Ray Bradbury short story brought to life.

Grizzly bear vs. polar bear? Global warming just got a whole lot awesomer.

Wasn't one of the criticisms of Watchmen that Goode doesn't look at all like Ozymandias, who in the comics looks like a blonde Superman?

@FlirtySanchez: The Wrestler was a very thoughtful film, but the wrestling scenes in it got pretty brutal. I'm intrigued by the thought of a Wolverine movie with plenty of violence, but violence that's not done in the "Oooooh, violence is awesome! Baysplosions! SPARTA!" style of many comic book movies.

I guess Zack Snyder wasn't kidding when he said he had no idea what to do with Superman.

Another cause of depression: Thinking about what the scientists did to those poor hamsters to know about the changes in their brains.

@Daemonicus: Because there are far fewer people who are sick of origin stories than there are people who even know what Green Lantern's origin story is?

Normally I would think this is cool, but I just finished reading Year of the Flood, so now I'm just weirded out.

Well, Karl Urban is certainly scowly enough to pull off The Bat. They could call it Dick and Bruce: The New Adventures of Batman.

The story of a kkid discovers they have magical powers and that there's a whole other world they never knew about is such a staple of children's fantasy that trying to say one author ripped off another for using it is just laughable.

@RalOberon: I could see Stoltz as Bruce Banner before I could see Mark Ruffalo.

Clayface? Every time I hear more casting rumors about DKR, I get a sick feeling in my stomach that we're headed for another Godfather 3 situation.

@Mr_Academic: I think it's just the filmmakers' way of saying that the universe in which the zombie apocalypse exists isn't one where zombies were already a part of pop culture. It allows more room for character development, since they aren't genre-savvy right off the bat.

Please no Talia al Ghul. Bringing in a character who's the previously unmentioned (in this universe, anyway) offspring of a prior villain to be the villain of a new movie is the stuff of third-rate horror movie sequels.

@glucious: Could be worse: It could have been named "Batman 3: The Rise of Robin."

Did someone mix up Aidan Turner with Aiden Turner? I could see Aidan as an elf before I could see him as a dwarf, and vice-versa.

So the harder the sci-fi, the more likely it is to have a conservative slant? I had never really given it much thought, but I guess that does make sense.

@djscruffy: Yeah, but everything about Superman Returns was too easy to ignore. So you have to ask yourself, "Was it really Routh's fault?" Either way, we're definitely getting a new Superman this time around.