Official I Am Legend Thread

Rate the movie

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Rac said:
Bad photoshop.


Akiva Goldsman = shait.

True , but Constantine was still an R Rated flick :cwink:
Also even tough movie constantine isn't Hellblazer constantine , there are still many non-hellblazer readers out there who did like/love Constantine.
Reasons that i have heard from my friends/relatives have been the visual tone of the movie , it's originality , the take on Hell and christian themes and Keanu's performance as Constantine.

So you see, there are alot of redeeming factors that can make a movie good.
Goldsman is shait but if you've got a gutsy director , he can turn a shaite script into something really cool :woot:

I have faith in Francis Lawrence
 
KenK said:
Wow. . . .

These are profoundly fake! Notice Smith's outfit is identical to the one he had in I, Robot. If these were real, someone in WB's promotional department would need to be shot. Poor composition and proportions, not to mention the unimaginative typeface.

Oh well , it was worth a try. And i agree with terry. Fake or not , that first poster looks awesome. Love the lightning , the darkness and the emptyness in that poster
 
kol_lover said:
Estimations for teaser trailer?

Early next year? Easter?

I think it will be attached to Spidey 3, so probably we'll see it in May.

I hope teaser will change my mind about the movie.
 
I think's it's gonna be good personally.
 
Just so everyone knows, those posters were made by someone on the I Am Legend imdb boards a few months ago.
 
I am going to take this time to explain to everyone why Akiva Goldsmith is a bad screenwriter. This may shatter some peoples' perceptions of him, but seeing as this is a comic book forum, probably not.
The first and major problem I have with Akiva Goldsmith is his lack and total disacknowledgement of a tool every writer should use: symbolism. In fact, all of his screenplays are devoid of any real meaning at all. Even A Beautiful Mind, which he shomehow won an oscar for, is decidingly straight-forward and bland. When there is symbolism, it becomes apparently obvious, and it becomes hard for the director to suggest it or hide it within in his film.
The next problem is his characters. None of them seem to go through any real changes, and when they do, it never seems real or authentic. Akiva never tries to get inside his character's heads, he seems detached from them. This makes for boring writing and generally a boring film.
Next, the dialouge. As I said before, Akiva will generally go the most obvious way with everything he does. Never have I watched a movie of his where I couldn't have predicted what the next character was going to say, and when I couldn't, that's because I couldn't have possibly come up with anything that horrid. Lost in Space, Batman and Robin, and I, Robot all have the WORST dialouge I have seen on film. In B&R it was laughably bad.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, while Akiva does occasionally try to come up with something original, most of his screenplays are incredibly cliche, boring, trite, and detached. That's why it's so damn hard to watch his movies.:cmad:
 
There's something I like about Akiva (probably his name), but there's something I don't like.
 
matrix_ghost said:
True , but Constantine was still an R Rated flick :cwink:
Also even tough movie constantine isn't Hellblazer constantine , there are still many non-hellblazer readers out there who did like/love Constantine.
Reasons that i have heard from my friends/relatives have been the visual tone of the movie , it's originality , the take on Hell and christian themes and Keanu's performance as Constantine.

So you see, there are alot of redeeming factors that can make a movie good.
Goldsman is shait but if you've got a gutsy director , he can turn a shaite script into something really cool :woot:

I have faith in Francis Lawrence
He only produced Constantine. I don't think even Francis Lawrence can make this good. I like Alex Proyas but I, Robot was bad. And here's again the Goldsman/Smith team working.
 
I thought I,Robot was pretty damn good.
 
Nope, and you're not curious... you're just nosy!

Nah... you're gonna say if I read the book I'd have hated the flick, right?
 
I'm not one of those "The book was better," guys but yes, you would hate the movie. The movie took what is essentially one of the greatest sci-fi books ever, and raped it. It took the title and the three laws of robotics idea, and then just built a hollow and unoriginal action flick around them. The movie is a decent time killer, but it's absolutely nothing compared to the book.

If they really wanted to make an I, Robot film, they should have just done an anthology like the original book, and stay as close as possible to the stories in the book. Or they could have just not made a movie.

If you ever get the chance to read the book, I highly recommend it. It'll really surprise you because of how different the movie is.
 
Imagine, Bryan Singer was once making I, Robot... (Goldsman wasn't aboard then.)
 
Well I'm blaming it on Rothman, as Proyas did.
 
Elisha Cuthbert said:
I am going to take this time to explain to everyone why Akiva Goldsmith is a bad screenwriter. This may shatter some peoples' perceptions of him, but seeing as this is a comic book forum, probably not.
The first and major problem I have with Akiva Goldsmith is his lack and total disacknowledgement of a tool every writer should use: symbolism. In fact, all of his screenplays are devoid of any real meaning at all. Even A Beautiful Mind, which he shomehow won an oscar for, is decidingly straight-forward and bland. When there is symbolism, it becomes apparently obvious, and it becomes hard for the director to suggest it or hide it within in his film.
The next problem is his characters. None of them seem to go through any real changes, and when they do, it never seems real or authentic. Akiva never tries to get inside his character's heads, he seems detached from them. This makes for boring writing and generally a boring film.
Next, the dialouge. As I said before, Akiva will generally go the most obvious way with everything he does. Never have I watched a movie of his where I couldn't have predicted what the next character was going to say, and when I couldn't, that's because I couldn't have possibly come up with anything that horrid. Lost in Space, Batman and Robin, and I, Robot all have the WORST dialouge I have seen on film. In B&R it was laughably bad.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, while Akiva does occasionally try to come up with something original, most of his screenplays are incredibly cliche, boring, trite, and detached. That's why it's so damn hard to watch his movies.:cmad:

I am agreed with you, he is really a bad screenwriter. But his only movie script which worked for me well was A Beautiful Mind. I liked storytelling and all scenes with Crowe trying to find out himself.
 
Whenever this thread gets bumped I look in hoping for a title change announcement.:oldrazz:
 
To me it's the amazing I Am Legend.
 
ToddIsDead said:
I'm not one of those "The book was better," guys but yes, you would hate the movie. The movie took what is essentially one of the greatest sci-fi books ever, and raped it. It took the title and the three laws of robotics idea, and then just built a hollow and unoriginal action flick around them. The movie is a decent time killer, but it's absolutely nothing compared to the book.

If they really wanted to make an I, Robot film, they should have just done an anthology like the original book, and stay as close as possible to the stories in the book. Or they could have just not made a movie.

If you ever get the chance to read the book, I highly recommend it. It'll really surprise you because of how different the movie is.

The book is an anthology...All they did for the movie was make up a story set in the same universe in order to avoid the problems associated with adapting said book. Alex Proyas is an excellent film maker and everything except for Will Smith was fantastic in that movie.
 
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