Spidey-Lad93
Civilian
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2014
- Messages
- 759
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 11
People need to move on The Sam Rami films are finished if they rebooted Spider-Man again for the next movie I would still watch and give it a fair judgement
Why do fans always decide what "fair judgment" is?People need to move on The Sam Rami films are finished if they rebooted Spider-Man again for the next movie I would still watch and give it a fair judgement
Why do fans always decide what "fair judgment" is?
Why do fans always decide what "fair judgment" is?
I didn't ask that though. I asked why fans, who have a potential bias towards the film of their own, are the arbiters of what "fair judgment" is.A review that talks about the actual film instead of lecturing the reader about consumer capitalism or the Hollywood Industry today or turn into an essay about how good the Sam Raimi version. A review that tells me what was good in ASM2 and what wasn't.
Of course I saw some critics bash TWS because it's a cap movie. It's just it seems that more and more negative reviews apparantly are because it's a reboot.
When did I say that?This coming from the man who wants to put judgement on which Studio made this movie. :b
First, this is true. Second, my point was that this wasn't the most purely creative project, which it wasn't. That is why the first film had a rushed script with a completely different tone and look from the sequel, at least going by the trailers."Sony only makes these movies to retain the rights" argument.
I didn't ask that though. I asked why fans, who have a potential bias towards the film of their own, are the arbiters of what "fair judgment" is.
Also, even if one agrees that kind of a review is out of order, that is a small minority that every film suffers from. You can't bunch the other negative or lukewarm positive reviews with those ones. Too many to simply cast them aside as bias like that imo.
So ASM got rotten reviews from critics for being "unnessesary" in doing the origin story. Ok you have a point but I think it's unfair but I can understand.
Now lots of critics are bashing it acgually because it's also f***ing unnessesary? F*** off. These critics should bury their head in shame. It's just childish, it's actually disgusting to think that these people are paid to have well thought out opinions but clearly they have the a very flawed and biased mindset. This is a lesson that critics are no more of value than yourselves. Critics that don't like ASM2 are fine but because it's "unnessesary" because you suffer from the horrible disease that is fanboyism then you need to simply grow up. Really pathetic how ignorant some people are it's actually unreal.
And have you ever considered it is because you care about this film more? That you are a fan? I know I read more MOS reviews just because Superman is my favorite. I know I will read tons of Star Wars reviews, because it is Star Wars. As fans, we all look a little closer when it comes to our favorite characters.It just seems to be more with this film. I really enjoy reviews like Total Film or IGN (though I don't read them too much critics reviews much) as they were mixed-positive but even though I didn't agree with what was said, they explained it well and I can accept that fine. They didn't turn it into a reboot/Raimi debate too.
There will defenatly be fans anyway with a positive bias (Avenging Spidey) but like negative bias you'll clearly see it by the ignorance in the post.
To answer your question, a fair review is really one that talks about a film and what was good or bad, weigh it up and give a conclusion.
First, this is true. Second, my point was that this wasn't the most purely creative project, which it wasn't. That is why the first film had a rushed script with a completely different tone and look from the sequel, at least going by the trailers.
Fox rushed First Class, but it is also my favorite X-Men film. So if TASM had been amazing this wouldn't be a problem. But if they really made two mediocre films in a row, well yeah. The balance between creative and cash becomes more disproportionate.
Did I disagree with this? I have watched every Bond film there is more then once. There are eras that feel like complete money making activities, and I don't care for them much. Where I watch the OHMSS, the first four Connery films and The Craig films all the time.You could argue the same for the Raimi films, they kept making them to retain the rights to make more money. ASM had two years to write, it was being written in 2009. Same as SM2. ASM2 is a sequel to ASM with a new suit, that's it.
Also X-Men First Class was a prequel even if the continuity errors make it out that way.
You don't need 3D glasses to tell that Peter Parker is a bit of a pill. Yes, I know he has had a hard upbringing, his parents abandoning him when he was a little boy, but he's got a smart mouth and a bad attitude, as Gwen Stacy's stern police captain father (Denis Leary) noticed in the first movie of the rebooted series.
Don't know what I'm talking about? You're probably over 40 and the world of Spider-Man is a mystery to you. This is Episode 2 of the second movie iteration of Spider-Man, or what we might call Sony's attempt to turn a 1962 comic book fantasy character from the Cold War into a franchise that will never die. Every studio wants one of those, and Episode 1 of Tranche 2 brought in more than $US750 million ($800m), so shut up!
The copy-catting is hardly new. Batman and Superman predate Spidey by about 25 to 30 years, so most of Spidey's origin ideas are, shall we say, borrowed from earlier comics. And frankly, the idea of a flying arachnid with his human face completely hidden was pretty dumb even in 1962, except that it worked.
The reason was simple: Spidey was a teenager with superhero powers, just as the readers were largely teenagers without. Teen characters up till then were mostly sidekicks. Spider-Man was a boy, trying to become a man, a theme that is as old as Jesus
It would all be completely ludicrous, were this not the second decade after the attacks of 9.11.2001. Every film that trashes New York now does it with that in mind, so that every film becomes a 'memorial'. Yeah right, like trashing New York hasn't been a movie staple since King Kong in 1933. It's just that now, we have a horrible reminder that nightmares do come true. Unfortunately, superheroes don't, which makes these movies hollow at best, downright offensive at worst.
I have done this twice recently myself.I actually fell to sleep Darth! Here's my review of the review, if you will

This is laying the ground work of the writer's perspective/bias. Considering we want our critics to be honest, how is this a bad thing? Would it be any different then some telling you how "comic accurate" something in a film is?These are the opening four paragraphs from the SMH review, why this bothers me is that not once is the phrase "The Amazing Spiderman 2" used. The critic spends the first four paragraphs of his review attacking PP as a character, saying most of the ideas are ripped off from other superheroes, alienated people over 40, again attacked the franchising of the film, and basically did anything except talk about the film. What the reviewer does do however is indicate quite early a clear BIAS in his assesment of the movie.
I could go on with how his assesment of the movie is generalised and flawed, but I think we should analyse the bias, since you know, this thread is about bias.
From the paragraphs we can gather, in the most basic of terms.
-The reviewer does not like the spiderman series
-He does not like the idea of the "cash grab"
If you cannot see bias in those paragraphs, you are contributing to the diminishing quality of the media worldwide, and you need to start thinking critically and noticing these explicit signs of bias.
Can I just tack something on at the end? No? Well I'm doing it anyway!
Films making real life parallels happen all the time. All the time. We just saw another comic book film do it.Ah, comparing a scene in a fictitious film to one of mankind's darkest days, just charming. Typical sensationalist Australian media, bottom of the barrel stuff. Again, if a critic cannot differentiate reality from fiction, he/she is in the wrong business.
And if someone even tries to pull out the "opinion" card I'm going to explode. Enjoy this article from The Conversation that sums up my views
http://theconversation.com/no-youre-not-entitled-to-your-opinion-9978
Who wants an example of bias in a positive review?
I laugh at all this "bias critics" crap.
What about "bias fans" who will like anything with Spider-Mans name on it simply because it's Spider-Man?