WHAT GREAT SCREENTEST?! A screentest we haven't seen. Anyway whatever. Seriously Guard this is a dead project. Its no longer necessary to homer a dead project that is dead. Everyone in this town speaks BS so much I'm honestly numb to it. When I hear Tim Story said Alba had the best screentest for Invisible Woman am I supposed to believe that and get hope from that? Because I don't.
If Gale is truly that good where is the Wonder Woman movie starring Gale? Where is Gale in ANYTHING of note?
Homering?
Is that like if I was to go "Mmm...unproduced Justice League movie"
So maybe it's BS.
I didn't say "didn't the great screentest give you some hope?"
I said "Wouldn't a great screentest give you some hope?"
If Gale is truly that good where is the Wonder Woman movie starring Gale? Where is Gale in ANYTHING of note?
Well, she's known for being a model, and she's Austrailian, so it's going to probably take her a couple of years to be in anything of note if that's what she in fact wants to pursue.
This movie isn't in production. Hammer is not playing Batman. So what are you talking about?
What do you mean what am I talking about?
I am speculating on what might have been.
If you're trying to defend this ludicrous "schizophrenic" characterization of Batman, you're not doing a very good job.
So some supposed "psychiatrist" out there is so incompetent in his own field that he doesn't even know the basic symptoms of a well-known illness like schizophrenia? The involvement of this incompetent is then supposed to raise my confidence in the movie project?
This is, of course, assuming that they actually told Armie "paranoid schizophrenic".
I'm not trying to defend anything. I'm just thinking out loud.
And I'm saying I think a Batman with trace elements of schizophrenia as a character exploration could be interesting.
1.That is a completely INCORRECT application of the term. I might give it a pass if some layperson made that mistake, but a supposed psychiatrist? No.
Fair enough.
2. Batman doesn't have multiple personalities either.
I never said he did.
I'm talking about the fact that I've heard people use "schizo" the wrong way in conversaiton, much the same as I've heard "multiple personality disorder" used in the wrong way.
And which "elements" of schizophrenia do you think they're supposed to cherry pick? The disorganized thinking and inability to focus? The psychotic hallucinations? The agitated body movements? NONE of that is Batman.
Your Batman, as near as I can tell, is the safest and most straightforward and cartoonishly simple type you can find. While do I find that Batman entertaining, I tend to find a Batman with more issues and complexities to be more entertaining and satisfying.
And which "elements" of schizophrenia do you think they're supposed to cherry pick? The disorganized thinking and inability to focus? The psychotic hallucinations? The agitated body movements? NONE of that is Batman.
It's interesting that you mention only the ones that wouldn't really apply to an interesting or complex portryal of Batman (except for halluciations, which I will get to).
Frankly, I think it would be interesting if Batman, at some point, developed some issues that made it harder than usual for him to function in his mission as a result of who he's been during his crusade, and the impact of that on him as a person. Hallucinations and some type of social interaction impairment would be a start. He could also deal with some depression, or even anxiety issues, and some paranoia. I don't think, other than hallucinations (which he has had before) that all these are too far outside who Batman is anyway. Again, people who have gone through much less than Batman have can develop these types of issues.
And that's a crappy portrayal of the characters, which wasn't used in the animated series, Nolan's movies, or many comics themselves.
I guess "crappy" comes down to opinion. As for the rest of that, what's your point?
Are the animated series episodes, Nolan's movies, and your incredibly vauge "many" comics the be-all, end-all of what Batman can and should be?
Batman is the smartest guy in the room, and a leader. He's a leader because he's so obsessed and driven, and wants everything done right. The other heroes follow him, and trust in his decisions. Because he's one of the World's Finest superheroes. They wouldn't trust him if they thought he was "losing it."
A leader can't have some mental issues?
Read some JLA comics from oh, 1988 on. Several of the JLA members tend to think Batman is a bit scary, are weirded out by him, and are often concerned for him. And yet they still trust him. And them losing their trust in him, again, is half the point of the OMAC and TOWER OF BABEL storylines that were adapted for JUSTICE LEAGUE: MORTAL.
No, it's ridiculous and shallow.
I'm not understanding how exploring the complexities of the concept of mental illness in a character who dresses up like a Bat and battles madmen, and represses his anger, pain, and engages in unhealthy social and interpersonal interactions while dealing with a duality of being, is "ridiculous" or "shallow". I'm not saying he should just be labeled "crazy" with no further analysis or character exploration and development.
Real Batman has issues, those issues are acknowledged, but the story is balanced and nuanced enough not to go over the top. Real Batman has flaws and occasionally rubs people the wrong way. But those flaws also stem from the very things that make him great. Real Batman tries to come across as cold and terrifying, but shows genuine compassion for people. That's much deeper than "he's crazy."
So...exploring mental illness is "over the top"?
Again, I never said that he's crazy.
And the exploration of concepts if he was seen as crazy wouldn't be limited to someone saying "Damn. He's crazy".
Batman does not "struggle to function." Being extremely functional and accomplished is one of his defining traits. Batman is always fighting for the mission; he's not some crazy psycho with problems that prevent him from even doing that mission.
Well maybe he should sometimes. Being Bruce Wayne and Batman can't be easy, and I think that there's less of a sacrifice element to the character if it is.
I never said I wanted him portrayed as a psycho with problems that prevent him from doing that mission entirely.
Is this psychiatrist a fan who has actually observed Batman in previous stories? Is this psychiatrist even competent in his own supposed profession, if he doesn't even know what actual schizophrenia is?
How the hell should I know? The mere fact that they even bothered to bring in people to make the actors think more deeply about the character's mental aspects tells me that this was probably going to be a deeper take on the character than we have usually seen. Certain deeper than the average cartoon he's featured in. While some of them did explore psychological elements, "many" of them did not.
I can't prove it would have been deeper, anymore than you can prove that Armie Hammer actually was told Batman would be a paranoid schizophrenic, or that Batman was going to be in JL: MORTAL.
Give me a break. The Timmverse is better than many of the actual comics.
The Timmverse is largely based on comics that have existed. It is good largely because some of the comics its based on have been good.
And Batman's not a psycho in many comics or the Nolan movies either.
That's not going to convince me that exploring this new idea is a bad idea. Sorry.
Because of a PREVIOUS story that shook up the DC Universe including Batman
So? Obviously they wanted to use the idea of Batman becoming paranoid and keeping tabs on his teammates. Who cares if that originated in a different story? Did you ***** when Scarecrow was riding a horse but not in a story based on THE LONG HALLOWEEN?
So...your solution is to completely piss on the character by casting some geeky manboy?
No...
But I didn't make the casting decision of Jay Baruchel, did I?
You know how you mislead the audience despite the character being a narcissistic businessman? Don't make him do something outright villainous. Hell, let him help the heroes at some point. Let him run from other villains supposedly out to kill him. Make him the butt of some jokes. Make him too funny to be thought of as evil. There are so many ways to do it without some ridiculous and degrading casting like getting Jay freaking Baruchel to play your big bad.
Here's the problem with that approach...
A, that sounds cheesy.
B, I'm fairly certain they'd still suspect the handsome corporate businessman of being a villain if he had any of his character traits intact.
And if he' was not a rich, narcissistic, crafty, pseudo immoral shyster corporate type with a sarcastic edge...then he's not really Max Lord, and who CARES if they cast Baruchel? THAT would be pissing on the character. Casting Jay Baruchel just pissed on the character's appearance.
Yes there is. No real acting experience before or even AFTER this Justice League project. The fact that she was taking acting lessons during production.
No. There is not any evidence to prove whether she would be good or bad. By your own admission, she had no real acting experience for you to base your assessment of her acting prowess on before or after this project
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68lSl94ubG0
I don't think she's awful. Granted, she's playing a model in this.
This is a guy who thought Jay Baruchel could play a big bad. I'm not giving him ANY benefit of the doubt.
And you know that Jay couldn't play the main villain because...
WB made Halley Berry's CINO. They were going to make a "hilarious" Jack Black Green Lantern movie...They eventually weren't even OK with this, which is why this project is dead.
The Jack Black project (which is actually pretty funny, just so wrong for GL), never got off the ground. CATWOMAN was horrible, but that was a movie WB made to avoid losing even more money that they'd sunk into the project since 1992.
And WB had clearly changed their approach to comic book films after making CATWOMAN and abandoning that version of GREEN LANTERN. They'd made BATMAN BEGINS, SUPERMAN RETURNS, THE DARK KNIGHT, V FOR VENDETTA and CONSTANTINE.
They weren't ok with moving forward on JUSTICE LEAGUE: MORTAL, because they couldn't get the Australian tax breaks, couldn't afford to risk making the movie, and didn't want to risk it.
He wanted her for mysterious reasons BEFORE any screen test. Ever hear of confirmation bias? And this paltry little sentence means nothing to me. Other directors have talked about how awesome their superhero movies and actors were supposed to
be, only for those movies and actors to suck.
I don't think the reasons are all that mysterious.
She looks quite a bit like Wonder Woman.
Sure, there's bias out there. My point was only that there was an actual screentest, per George Miller
This trite little quote means exactly nothing. I've been a Batman fan since I was a kid. Could I play Batman?
A cartoon Batman, maybe.