The Guard said:
It's like this, I'm gonna make a comment on the futility of war in my movie, so I make the main character a soldier that goes to war and sees his buddies die horrible deaths. But at the same time I make the war scenes cool and exciting, and I make the guy a hero that everybody roots for and cheers when he blows up enemy heads.
So what am I saying? Am I saying "war is hell" or "war is fun"?
What is Snyder saying? What is the "comment"? What exactly is he saying
about modern superhero costumes? What
Moore was saying about superhero costumes was that they look silly and it takes a certain kind of person to wear them. Is that what Snyder is saying? Ok, but didn't he make them that way because he wanted the characters to look cool?
Hence, the contradiction.
He's not criticizing the costumes, he's saying the original designs have a naivete to them that people won't get. They'll just think they look downright silly.
People (at least moderately smart people) would get it, if they saw the movie. But they wouldn't see the movie if they thought it would be silly.
Therein lies the problem. A movie is not a comic book. They want millions of people to go see it. Including stupid people who wouldn't "get" naiveté. So they decided to make things a little cooler, to attract that lowest common denominator. It's a purely commercial decision, which I completely understand. I just don't have to be happy about it.
Then the faithful translation of character designs should become even less important. Because according to you, they were ripoffs of generic suits anyway.
Remember what I said near the end? How It Came To Be is irrelevant in face of What It Is.
They weren't specifically conceived as a comment because that wasn't necessary. Superhero suits are superhero suits. They would work as needed regardless of how they looked, as long as they looked superhero-ish.
I mean, god, this is so obvious.
Who cares? Does that mean the flm costumes can't?
I'm not arguing with "can", I'm just saying "aren't".
Aside from the Batman costumes, you also have elements from the Daredevil and the Spider-Man suits. And of course, the same basic "generic color scheme" that many superheroes have always had. That's more than enough to make a valid "commentary" on recent superhero movie culture.
What are these elements from the Daredevil and Spider-Man suits? I honestly don't see them.
And "generic color scheme" is embedded on superhero culture since 1938. There's nothing modern about it.
So does the Batsuit in the Batman comics compared to any movie suit. What's your point?
I'm not even sure anymore.
I guess what I'm saying is "Nite Owl's movie suit is too overdone and cool-looking, and I would prefer if it were a little more plain and silly."
I believe that's not a preposterous statement.
I mean, even if you don't agree with me, you can see where I'm coming from.
Right?
And yet, even though it wouldn't be productive, he bothers to make his owl ship resemble an owl. Complete with feathering. What's your point, exactly? That he seems to have put more work into making his suit "look" a certain way than he did in the comics?
Who cares?
This is a character PROVEN to put work into strictly visual elements already in the comic.
Ok, here you are probably right. I was waaaaay off, rationalizing things like that.
What about "the man has a lot of money" don't you understand? You just seem to assume that because he has a secret identity that he sits in the basement putting this together piece by piece by himself. What are you basing that on?
On the book. I think it's established he made everything by himself. He's a lone inventor. I don't think employees are mentioned at any point.
He's talking about the weird nature of Veidt's surroundings.
Yes he is.
More precisely, he is making an analogy, i.e. "these surroundings make me as nervous as a normal person must feel when he/she is around one of us".
Therefore, they make normal people nervous. Thus, they are menacing.
On what planet? He looks ridiculous.
I bet you wouldn't say that if you ran into him in a dark alley.
No, they are scared ****less of Rorschach, because he has a history of coming there and hurting people.
Mostly, but come on, you're not giving Dan enough credit. When he hears about Hollis and looses his cool the guy
begs for his life.
Or maybe being known vigilantes with a history of assault is part of it.
Yeah... as I mentioned. What's your point?
In that world, if you are a criminal and you see a person with a costume coming at your direction, it usually means trouble.
My point is, apart from Hollis, most vigilantes took things other than movement into consideration, one of those things being
intimidation, which was a big part of their business.
No it doesn't. It looks like a man wearing a quasi-armored suit. You can't make a call on how "stiff" it looks until you have seen it in action. This one has obvious "joints" built into it, so saying it's not flexible makes little sense at this point. Less restrictive in the sense that his cape is now not all around him, and he no longer has the cumbersome "hood attachment".
It looks like Dan would have a very hard time touching his toes, even if he
was in perfect shape.
Again, how do you know that he didn't hire people to do some of his work for him? He's not going to fighting crime ALL the time.
I can see him paying someone to build internal generic parts of Archie or something, but do you honestly see a tailor calling him and going "Your Halloween owl-costume is ready, Mr. Dreiberg, when can you come and get it?"
I was going by common sense, but if it needs to be
written somewhere, then you got me.
At the same studio. Who probably had control over the designs. And it wouldn't matter anyway, because let's face it, the "overly sculpted/slightly high-tech muscles" look has been a part of Batman movies, and superhero movies in general for years.
Yes, it has.
It's not a comment, though.
At least not a relevant one.
They're clearly meant to be commenting on something. Look at how fetishized Laurie's costume is.
As was the original. What's your point?
The fetishization of Laurie's costume has nothing to do with anything "modern". Superheroine costumes were fetishized since the first time Wonder Woman got tied up on a rocket or something.
Because it's too vague to really be saying anything. If they wanted to make a statement, they should've been more coherent
It's got the "briefs", the sculpted belt...the sculpted rubber armor, the cape...
Granted, Ozy's costume looks more like a superhero costume than it did in the book, which is nice, because he is the guy who sells toys of himself.
I guess you
could say it was partly inspired by the modern superhero look.
Or maybe
it uses the modern superhero look in exactly the same way as other modern superhero movies without saying anything relevant about it?
It's just that sculpted rubber looks better in movies.
It's a comment on both that and the nature of modern superhero suits.
What is the nature of modern superhero suits and what is Ozymandia's suit saying about it.
Oh come off it. He didn't need to give a reason for updating them at all. He could have updated just because, and he did so, and he admitted to it already. He's already said he updated them for various reasons. So this "commentary" statement isn't some "smokescreen" he's created to justify doing so.
In my opinion, it is exactly that.
If he didn't say something like that, the fans would be pissed. Think about it. "Hey fans, I updated the costumes, because the originals were totally naive and silly and people wouldn't get that. So I made them really cool and snazzy, you're welcome".
While adding that the update is also (and more importantly!) a "commentary", he is assuring the fans that "we are totally in the same frame of mind you guys" (that is, the frame of mind of people who think movies and comics should make "commentaries" on things, e.g. Alan Moore fans).
But I'm just guessing. Maybe he did want to make a commentary, in which case he did not quite succeed.