rogbngp
Snyderverse supporter
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2015
- Messages
- 2,185
- Reaction score
- 3
- Points
- 58
The only thing that's kinda making it difficult for us to believe that this film will get an RT score in the 90's percentile is Zack Snyder himself.
Critics can love Terrio's script, Ben and the cast's performance, Fongs cinematography, Zimmer's score etc. but i have a feeling that critics are somehow gonna blame Snyder on anything they could find, hell even in this day and age a film with a 75% on RT is like a 90% for a Snyder film lol, i still believe that out of all the critics that are gonna review this film for RT post embargo already have a predetermined biasism for Snyder and might give BvS a rotten review just because he made it.
But all in all from what Jurassic World has taught us, as long as this film has an Rotten Tomatoes score of a minimum of 70+ then i believe that it'll be good enough to have some good legs throughout April and have a good total worldwide Box Office run.
If BvS is chock-full of popcorn fun, thrills and excitement, with excellent performances, a bit of humor sprinkled in, giving us heartfelt, human connection moments, and well executed overall, then critics can also laud this "rehabilitated" Snyder that they're now seeing. They might be like "Hooray, he's alright now, he finally listened to us!" I.e., He's finally joined the mainstream. He could even be the toast of the town.
Anyway, if the film is all that the RT score will be in the 90s I do believe. The question is how edgy will Snyder be as an artist in his own right. I love the almost radical approach to the entire project that Snyder took with MoS (a deliberately controversial reinvention of a myth). I want to see him keep that same edge, but he has to somehow blend his very artistic, creative and visionary themes into a mainstream blockbuster. If he has subtly encoded them (and he is very good at that, I think), I think that is his best bet for achieving that balance.
There is so much riding on the success of this film that Snyder must deliver a mainstream crowd-pleaser. Snyder has to know that all too well. I suspect that the influence of Terrio and Affleck (Ben is in certain respects an even better director than Snyder) should be felt here. Can you imagine the conversations that must have taken place when Snyder, Affleck, and Terrio discussed how to make this film a surefire success?
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