novamatic
novamatic
novamatic

Justice League will be successful. It will make a lot of money. It might not be particularly good but it will be “successful” they way this studio measures success.

First of all, there’s nothing to fight about. Opinions aren’t instructions.

It’s a fair comparison in terms of how one anticipates they’ll enjoy their movie-viewing experience, has nothing to do with the type of movie being made.

This is the best “Well, if you consume it this way” explanation I’ve ever read.

This seems like the perfect opportunity for certain people to complain about “Marvel formula”, excessive cgi and other tropes. I’m just glad there’s not a single wisecracking dudebro in the trailer.

I’m ok with this.

It’s a journey that was backed up in the same Empire interview by Wonder Woman herself, Gal Gadot: “Justice League is not a dark or heavy movie. It doesn’t have the weight Batman v Superman had,” she said.

Working for Disney must be the easiest job in the world right now.

This is an example of someone wanting their work to be “important” instead of good.

I’m ok with this as long as the movies are good. Unfortunately they aren’t focused on that.

There are two Marvel movies on Netflix right now. Just two.

What is there to be confused about?

You’d imagine that Warner Bros. would be focused on trying to recreate what it was about Wonder Woman that made audiences love it so much to make sure that its next movies are successful, but that seems not to be the case.

Not even a fan of Marvel’s Netflix universe and I know this post could have waited.

Two movies.

The Forbes article linked in that Justice League bit is really, really bloated and bloviating.

Seems like only yesterday io9 were paid employees of Marvel Studios.

I read this entire post patiently waiting for the part that explains why it’s a “mistake.”

Considering the number of fan and genre sites that fuel wild speculation and attempt to piece together plot details with frame-by-frame trailer breakdowns, it’s not surprising he would do this.

Every movie introduces “too many characters,” it’s all in how they balance and prioritize them.