This is the only appropriate thing I can think of.
This is the only appropriate thing I can think of.
I looked at the IMDB for this guy and I feel really bad for him. Before Dragonball he wrote a shitty 1996 Mark Walberg move, The Big Hit, and a few direct to video action films.
I was kinda hoping he’s have something else to offset Dragonball. He doesn’t even have something with success, critical or financial, to…
I never wished to be Ray Bradbury before that video.
Is the lead male character a pedophile stalker?
Does the story have some barely hidden message about how abortion is wrong even if the mother’s life is in danger?
The public needs the information.
Especially in the first sentence of the story’s description. I mean geez, hold that off until you sold the story to the rubes.
Sadly this guy just burned a lot of bridges. Hollywood is all about publicity. They don’t want someone rocking the boat by revealing, say, Apocalypse could have looked better in the new X-men move.
I may be wrong, but I’m fairly certain union contracts and laws determine what mostly goes into the credits.
No union? Then there’s no guarantee you get credit. Hollywood is not known for being generous. Unless they are being forced to share credit, they probably won’t.
As you can guess, all that humility at awards…
Lol. Cave troll. Can’t unsee. I just thought he looked like a Michael Bay Ninja Turtle.
Can you imagine the writer’s room for Dawn of Justice?
Writer 1: “I’m having problems working out a logical reason for Batman and Superman fight”
Writer 2: “Just make Batman an idiot. It’s not like the character is supposed to be a detective.”
Also,
Writer 1: What’s Lex Luthor’s reason for trying to turn Batman and…
Same here. Everyone was doing what they thought was best, but none of them were portrayed as being absolutely right or wrong. I understood Tony’s motivations, and I understood Steve’s motivations.
Did both sides make mistakes? You betcha.
This. It was a great scene, and it made sense, but I was genuinely sad to see events play out like that. I wanted everyone to hug it out and go home.
There were real stakes involved with characters I was concerned about.
Now the airport fight could have went on for another 20 minutes and I would have been fine.
At the end of Dawn of Justice, I was like, Why are they fighting? The story made Batman and Superman look like violent idiots.
Superman could have easily pinned Batman and explained the situation, but instead he chose to just throw him around. Why? He’s not going to kill him, but he’s not doing anything to stop the…
I totally missed that. Well, there’s another reason to go see this again.
On the same note, I’m glad I will never watch Dawn of Justice ever again.
You’re talking about the moment when three characters talk reasonably instead of fighting because there is some mandate they have to fight, unlike Dawn Of Justice. That’s was the coup de gras when Civil War beat Dawn of Justice.
I enjoyed Age of Ultron. I think the worst complaint people make about it is it’s fun, but not perfect.
Infinity War will kick all the asses.
Well the only comparison I was trying to make was a few similar plot points, but while Dawn of Justice was a trainwreck, Civil War was just outstanding.
I can’t really talk about the similarities without too many spoilers. I like this movie too much to ruin it for someone who accidentally reads my comments.
I guess it’s…
Mr. I Don’t Care was pretty fearsome, wasn’t he?
One of my only gripes about the move is he got crowded out a little. His story was so central to the plot and then it kind of just fizzled.
Without spoiling too much, I what impressed me were all the parallels between Civil War and Dawn of Justice.
Despite that, Civil War succeeded in all the ways Dawn of Justice failed. The ending of Civil War was one of the most deeply affecting endings in superhero films. The ending of Dawn of Justice just made me think…
That reply too.