Alternate Endings: Discuss Here

jumpin over from ComicVine and in the comments for the News Post of Ryan Reynolds on his thoughts for a Deadpool movie, someone said this...

"There was a ending with Wade Wilson, Not really Deadpool. We first see the nuclear plant shattered, in rubble. We see a hand, seemingly reaching for a head which is well hidden due to the palette.
Then, someone with a black coat similar to Sabertooth's, comes, kneels and pick up the head. The camera pans, we see Wade, with his head filled with wounds (he has a hood hiding most of it). As it pans, we hear "Who the hell (Or heck, not sure) are you?" We get a pan around at the "sunset". Though as it zooms out during the pan, we see the eyeballs of Weapon X turning to look at his body.""

sorry if its been previously posted, but if its new then cool.
well, i'm not 100% sure what this person is describing here, but id like to get others opinions on it, like if its likely a fake, or what exactly is happening here
Someone posted that here saying that is what they say but they posted that exact quote so I now know the person here was lying...probably to seem cool. I think it is fake:csad:
 
i REALLY hope my theater lets me see wat happens AFTER the credits
and i REALLY hope to see the Deadpool scene, and not some emo-logan nonsense =p
 
That's not animalistic, that's just holding a very bad grudge. :funny:

No, but being blinded by rage so badly that you just ruthlessly murder anyone and everyone who gets in your path to your brother is.
 
No way. Bus was there for a while. Driving it in at the exact same spot (meaning no random traffic in the way) is far fetched as well. It makes for a cool visual, but doesn't make any sense in practice.

I just watched the scene again. First of all there was no traffic or barely any cars on the road when the Joker and his goons entered the building. The bus was at the building for a minute and 16 seconds. It wasn't blocking any cars from moving when it came out of the building. It was really perfect timing because rush hour traffic probably started around the time the bus crashed. The plan might have been farfetched but, I'm still not seeing a plothole here.



've heard this explination as well. There are simply too many people that would have to be corrupt . Makes no practical sense.

I still think you're making this too complex. Not everything in this world is practical. Why should we believe a comicbook world should make perfect sense?

Also, I honestly think many people in our society are this corrupt. A few months ago I saw a very distrubing video of a man who was run over by a car. At least 50 people saw the incident and not one of them did a damn thing to help the paralyzed man for about 5 minutes. If something that disturbing can happen in the real world was that scene in the dark knight really that farfetched?





Anything in the world can be dismissed that way. All the hospital workers could have been corrupt too. All the police watching to see if the boats were tampered with could have been corrupt.
Any plot hole that is explained with "The people were corrupt" is indeed a plot hole.

None of these are plotholes if moral corruption runs rampant in a storyline. Farfetched maybe but, not implausible.


I haven't seen Wolverine sir. Why would you think I can't accept critisism of it.

My mistake. I thought you were agreeing with what Ace of Knaves was saying because you were looking for double standards.


I love TDK and am actually pretty skeptical of Wolverine. I dunno, you probably shouldn't make stupid assumptions.

See above post.

That one's believable. Explain how he was able to destroy a hospital. Demolitions that big require an AWFUL lot of explosives.

I thought I already explained this with the Joker's ties to the mafia. How hard is it to get illegal weapons through the black market?
 
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Why should we believe a comicbook world should make perfect sense?

Because you're expecting the X-Men and Wolverine comic book worlds to make 100% perfect sense, and whenever they don't, you're the first in line to criticize it.
 
Because you're expecting the X-Men and Wolverine comic book worlds to make 100% perfect sense, and whenever they don't, you're the first in line to criticize it.


I'm still not exactly sure why you brought the comics into the subject. A movie should stand on it's own merit. No audience member should need to read a comic to better understand these adaptations. All I want to see is the X-Men movieverse make more sense.

It's interesting that you totally took that quote I made out of context.
 
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the deadpool scene sounds legit. i think we may really have our deadpool ending
 
Just came back from the secret screening.

I thought it was Wolverine.

It wasn't.

It was Star Trek.
 
I have a feeling the Deadpool ending wont be in as many theaters as the Wolverine ending just so fans will keep going trying to get the ending they want...
 
I'm still not exactly sure why you brought the comics into the subject. A movie should stand on it's own merit. No audience member should need to read a comic to better understand these adaptations. All I want to see is the X-Men movieverse make more sense.

It's interesting that you totally took that quote I made out of context.

When someone criticizes the plot holes in TDK, you say "why should we expect a comic book world to make perfect sense"

But then you are here complaining about the same thing in Wolverine, because of whatever does or doesn't happen with Kayla's body after her apparent "death"

While the movies and comics should stand on their own, one is also based upon the other, therefore shares the same rules as the other.

Otherwise, what's the point of adapting if you're not going to actually base it on the subject matter?
 
TDK has its own forum to complain about stuff in that movie.
 
lol when did fan forums become a place to mostly complain? or right...it's always been that way.
 
When someone criticizes the plot holes in TDK, you say "why should we expect a comic book world to make perfect sense"

Yes, I said that and I explained away those so-called plotholes. Funny how you ignored that and only responded to one sentence that made up 1% of the content in a post.

But then you are here complaining about the same thing in Wolverine, because of whatever does or doesn't happen with Kayla's body after her apparent "death""

This is all relative. I was merely stressing the point that some people appeared to be looking to find plotholes that I don't regard as plotholes. You overanalyzed what I said as usual and completely, blew it out of proportion by saying I wouldn't be satisfied unless a comic book world makes perfect sense 100% of the time. That's BS. All comic book world's have plotholes. X-Men, Wolverine, and Batman are not exceptions. I just happen to see more plotholes in the X-Men movies and you don't. I don't understand why my criticisms of these X-Men films bother you so much and there's no point in trying to understand it anymore.

You are arguably the most hypersensitive X-men fanboy I've encountered on these forums. I knew about the adamantium bullet for well over a year. Many people have stated negative things about it before. I give a plausible explanation for why I didn't like the idea and I'm labeled by you as always being the first in line to bash these movies yet I clearly was not the first in this case. I thought we had agreed to disagree on these issues but, I guess that's way too much to expect from you. Continue your agenda against me and others who disagree with you if it makes you feel better.

While the movies and comics should stand on their own, one is also based upon the other, therefore shares the same rules as the other.

This argument again? In your opinion it does and in mine it doesn't because my expectations for different comic book movies is different. I thought I explained this two you in another thread. Hellboy 2 and Men in Black are perfect examples of this. I found more enjoyment in those two movies then X3 because the source material is not strong and I'm going to be more lenient with obvious plotholes. Those CBM's are mainly comedies that weren't meant to be taken seriously which happen to have strong sci-fi elements. I pretty much got what I expected and I was entertained.

Otherwise, what's the point of adapting if you're not going to actually base it on the subject matter?

I have no idea how this applies to me.


Finally, you really need to pay more attention to what you read. I have never said anything about Kayla's body. I haven't seen the damn movie so I have no idea what you're talking about.
 
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I hope you guys don't think the hidden endings will justify this movie, or forgive FOX for the rest of it. :csad:
 
I'm just going to look it up on Youtube when it's availible. The rest of the movie is the same, and since actually SEEING the new bonus ending is a crapshoot, I'm not going to fall for it. Fox thinks they can use this to recoup all of their piracy losses, but it's not doing it for me.
 
Oooh. How was it? :D ;)

But wait, what? Where did you find a secret screening?

It was excellent.

I got the tickets from my friend who worked at a radio station. I ASSUMED they were for Wolverine, that was going to open, like, uh, today and stuff. Imagine my surprise.
 
Ive seen the ending as described at the top of this page described similarly but with differences on several other sites... seems to be legit.
If so this doesn't make the movie any better, just means they didn't ruin a character, and makes the ending a little more silly.
 
I just watched the scene again. First of all there was no traffic or barely any cars on the road when the Joker and his goons entered the building. The bus was at the building for a minute and 16 seconds. It wasn't blocking any cars from moving when it came out of the building. It was really perfect timing because rush hour traffic probably started around the time the bus crashed. The plan might have been farfetched but, I'm still not seeing a plothole here.
Myabe plotholes was the wrong word. It's still just to far fetched to me. The first time I watched it, I was like "Wow. Awesome." The more I thought about it the more I realized that it's just too damn far fetched to buy into. But part of my original point was that things that don't really work in real life are easily forgotten if the movie is made well.





I still think you're making this too complex. Not everything in this world is practical. Why should we believe a comicbook world should make perfect sense?
when people say TDK is super realistic, then kinda. It's not. That doesn't bother meat all though. But some people like to use realism as some sort of criteria for what makes a movie good. I disagree with that 100%

Also, I honestly think many people in our society are this corrupt. A few months ago I saw a very distrubing video of a man who was run over by a car. At least 50 people saw the incident and not one of them did a damn thing to help the paralyzed man for about 5 minutes. If something that disturbing can happen in the real world was that scene in the dark knight really that farfetched?
Yeah, I know the video, and can buy people at the bank not doing anything....but there are so many instances where the Joker has free reign to do seemingly whatever he wants, and no one reports him, or catches on to the detailed traps he's planning? I dunno...far fetched.






None of these are plotholes if moral corruption runs rampant in a storyline. Farfetched maybe but, not implausible.
Remember that Simpsons episode with Xena? And Comic Book Guy asks about the ccontinuity errors, and Xena says "Well, everytime you see something like that....a wizard did it."

That's kinda what "corruption" is to TDK :)




My mistake. I thought you were agreeing with what Ace of Knaves was saying because you were looking for double standards.
Well, yes and no. My point was that looking for logic errors in a movie is pointless because EVERY movie has them. But if the movie is made well enough, and has many other things going for it (like TDK did) they become less noticable, because you are lost in the moment of the movie.

But if a movie has boring characters or slow plot, you notice the things that don't make sense much much more.

That theory doesn't really have to apply to wolverine, it works with ANY movie.

So my entire point is I don't really like "Well, this couldn't have happened in real life" as a reason for not liking something, because I think EVERY movie has those moments. The reasons they bug you usually has to do with how involved you are in the flick.



I thought I already explained this with the Joker's ties to the mafia. How hard is it to get illegal weapons through the black market?
It's not just getting the weapons, it's setting them up. That would take forever, in a bulding that has people working in it 24/7.
 
Ive seen the ending as described at the top of this page described similarly but with differences on several other sites... seems to be legit.
If so this doesn't make the movie any better, just means they didn't ruin a character, and makes the ending a little more silly.
so the rumored deadpool ending is true.
 
I just watched the scene again. First of all there was no traffic or barely any cars on the road when the Joker and his goons entered the building. The bus was at the building for a minute and 16 seconds. It wasn't blocking any cars from moving when it came out of the building. It was really perfect timing because rush hour traffic probably started around the time the bus crashed. The plan might have been farfetched but, I'm still not seeing a plothole here.

You're joking right? When the bus leaves the bank with rubble and dust falling of it the street is PACKED OUT with motorists and civilians on foot.

It also pulls out in front of another bus. So either that bus driver regularly sees other buses pull out of holes in bank walls or...nothing.

It was ridiculous. But I don't care, I still love TDK.

But it is double standards. That bus scene is 1000000x more ridiculous than any scene in Wolverine, when you take into consideration that TDK is aiming to be a serious crime thriller with comic book characters and Wolverine is not aiming for lofty heights such as that.

Or what about the boats filled with explosives? No one thought to check the ferries that are escorting people in the midst of a bomb threat? Ya, riiiiiiight.
 
Can't we forget TDK and talk about Wolverine's flaws?
 

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