I Am The Knight
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STM was mostly grounded. A grounded tone is perfectly fine for Superman, but you also have to deliver a good movie.
I think lots of people want DC stuff to stay as non engaging as it's always been. From superman staying as unappealing as he used to be in that he has all the answers, to these people that actually think the campy corny aquaman that everyone and their mother made fun of to no end is actually what DC should have put forward...
Lastly, when it comes to the difference in 'tone' I look to something like The Two Towers. A serious epic with a various moments of levity. Where marvel has Legolas and Gimli killing and maming the enemy, making good sport of it and keeping head count, DC plays this same scenario very straight, no counting or quipping.... In doing so the later is then hailed as failing in light hearted fun when the sad reality is that they are committing to their drama in a very traditional manner. The levity has it's time and place but never undermines the drama, whereas the marvel approach has almost perfected the art of sprinkling it at just about any odd place. From the subway ride in Thor 2 to the dance off. Two different approaches both have their value to be sure. The difference between True Lies and Speed if you will. Unfortunately the fans and pundits won't let things be and have to campaign for their preference to be the one to rule them all.
Shame really.
The irony is that if WB/DC were to make action-comedies the way that Marvel does, there would be acerbic accusations of imitation. DC is damned if they do something different and damned if the follow their competition. As it were, DC films are not devoid of humor, and I am always bothered by the fact that opponents of DC's films see fit to level the charge that DC is always "dark and gritty." It seems that people conflate genre and narrative elements as beinf synonymous. Marvel makes action-comedies where as DC creates dramas. Because humor is not the focus of drama, people erroneously dismiss DC's superhero dramas as not being funny. It is all quite curious
I don't think WB being accused of imitation* by fanboys is going to dictate what direction they take.
The average person doesn't need there to be a difference between a MS movie or a WB movie the same way people generally don't care for there to be a distinct difference between Pixar, Disney, and Dreamworks. Same thing with...I don't know, cop movies, from diffferent studios. Since when does a studio claim a tone?
The flash isn't for everyone, just it's fans really. I enjoy it but in the same vain as Lois and Clark. I also can't imagine anyone defending how they handle the teen romance on that show yikes.
I enjoy it but me pal feel off with the Gorilla stuff. Not for everyone and hardly worth mandating across the board.
I think lots of people want DC stuff to stay as non engaging as it's always been.
Now that is an interesting supposition. There are posters on the Aquaman forum that have decried the DCCU look as not "looking like Aquaman" even though it is clearly based on Peter David's run with the character. These same individuals have said they wish to see the orange scalemail. I fathom that such fans posses a profound nostalgia for the campy era of DC (Batman '66, Superfriends).
Now that is an interesting supposition. There are posters on the Aquaman forum that have decried the DCCU look as not "looking like Aquaman"...
The irony is that if WB/DC were to make action-comedies the way that Marvel does, there would be acerbic accusations of imitation. DC is damned if they do something different and damned if the follow their competition. As it were, DC films are not devoid of humor, and I am always bothered by the fact that opponents of DC's films see fit to level the charge that DC is always "dark and gritty." It seems that people conflate genre and narrative elements as beinf synonymous. Marvel makes action-comedies where as DC creates dramas. Because humor is not the focus of drama, people erroneously dismiss DC's superhero dramas as not being funny. It is all quite curious
I personally think all this talk of "tone" is way overrated. No one cares about the tone of a movie; they care about the overall quality. DC needs to focus on making the best possible movies, not choose a certain tone and force it on their movies.
X-Men 2. Spider-Man 2. The Dark Knight. The Avengers. Days of Future Past. Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Guardians of the freakin Galaxy.
Look at the cream of the superhero crop and tell me there's a certain tone that works while others don't. Looking at the best, you'll see they focus on the character and let the themes develop organically, while forcing a style leads to mediocre movies like MoS and The Dark World.
I'm acting like the flash is a what now? I pointed out what I see a flaws, never said two words about how it's been doing. When I hear things like it's the best super hero show on TV right now, I feel the need to mention it's not for everyone, like most things. As for how good it's actually doing, not every show can get a co sign from another hit show, I mean I know that's kinda how marvel does most things but it's still worth pointing out when it happens. I wouldn't be surprised if it's running in stride with Arrow ratings. Especially when one considers the Network it's on and which show seems like the more natural fit(in own opinions of course).You're acting like Flash is some niche show when its been getting some good ratings recently, sometimes doing better than Arrow.
Also, who said that every show should be like The Flash?
Give it a shot and see how that goes...Or just do that assuming commentary you are known for doing(by me, and no thanks to your sig). I try to give your commentary the benefit of the doubt usually, but every now and then we find our self in this territory. Presumptuous waters if you will.LOL, the funny thing is, if I called something like MOS non engaging without putting some kind of "IMO" in there and saying it in the same way you did here, I'm sure some moron would accuse me of trolling or acting like my opinion is fact. But since you're bashing the past to prop up the current era of "Teh serious", I guess no one will say anything.
I'm acting like the flash is a what now? I pointed out what I see a flaws, never said two words about how it's been doing. When I hear things like it's the best super hero show on TV right now, I feel the need to mention it's not for everyone, like most things.
Give it a shot and see how that goes...Or just do that assuming commentary you are known for doing(by me, and no thanks to your sig). I try to give your commentary the benefit of the doubt usually, but every now and then we find our self in this territory. Presumptuous waters if you will.
On the actual point. I've noticed that Aquaman more than alot of other current heroes comes with giant bag of mockery, whether it be Entourage or commentary in his own current book, however self aware. Now in alluding to the presence of that fact and also that of book sales is hardly bashing to prop up 'teh' anything. It's pointing out that there is an unappealing history that comes with the property when taken a certain way. Never said that thing didn't have it's fans.
1) Aquaman's look is a source of derision and mockery. Even in his own current solo book, his look, power set and origin are a constant source of "humor", which suggests that even DC's writers are aware of the association if Aquaman's look with campy imagery. Just because I am unafraid of pointing out that fact doesn't mean that I am being close minded. Why do you think Peter David abandoned the classic costume? PAD has gone on record on his own site, stating thay he set out to prove that Aquaman was a hero that deserved the same kind of esteem given to Superman and Batman. Notice that I never gave my opinion on the suit, but rather addressed a well established association.
People did a lot of drastic things in the 90's to make certain superhero's look "kewl", and there's a reason why, comic book wise, that 90s Aquaman look will stay in the 90's/Early 00's. IMO, the only reason they're using that look for Momoa is because it fits him better than the classic look. Notice that, even with DC using AQ's rep as a source of humor in his books, they're still generally using the classic look.
That is not entirely true. During the Throne of Atlantis lead-up, there was an Aquaman and the Others backstory which featured a shirtless Arthur that very much recalls the PAD era, just sans-beard.
So that look isn't necessarily going to "stay" in the 90s.
Doesn't mean we can't see some toned down version of the orange scalemail. Doesn't mean someone shouldn't be brave in the future and given Aquaman that look in some later adaptation of the character.
Honestly, the PAD look will give the character more give with audiences that would otherwise dismiss Aquaman as that "useless" guy who can "talk to fish." And that is what I believe Marvin was attempting to commnicate. Some fans would rather Aquaman retain an unpopular look for the sake of their nostalgia than see Warner Bros. make a change that could widen the character's appeal.
Funny, cause to me his "Others" out looks more like a shirtless version of the modernized classic look than it does a non bearded version of the PAD era. And I disagree, as its not in the comics now. At best, his "Others" look its own thing, not somethng that harkens back to PAD.
Of course, we could've gotten these things now and been all right. Any costume designer worth his/her salt could find a way to make the classic AM outfit look credible on film.
By your definition, its not a change. They just decided to base his look off the 90's than off the look he's had for most of his existence.
1) I could grant you the concession of your own opinion, but you seem to be purposefully acting in an obtuse manner.
It is still a change, because they are going with a different look. Change has many definitions, including "to take and use another" in place of something. So, I am not sure what you hoped to gain out of that statement about semantics.
Not really, its just that the Others outfit isn't as PAD inspired as you initially claimed
An actual change would be an outfit we've never seen in Aquaman mythology. This movie outfit is essentially the PAD outfit without the hook.
1) The pants don't match the original outfit. The two-tone style is a PAD hallmark for the character, as is the lack of a shirt.
2) There is no such thing as "actual change." Something is either a change or it is not a change.
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As you can see, the pants, apart from the gold on the sides, very much resemble the green pants on his clasic outfit. No to mention the clean shaven look associated with the classic design, as well as the necklace he wore with the orange chainmail in Geoff's first JL arc. Also, PAD didn't go completely topless like the Others outfit does. But if you wanna believe that outfit is more PAD inspired than anything, go ahead.
I am not arguing semantics or being a pedant
Yeah, you pretty much are, actually. You obviously disagree with that however.
then yeah, I'm going to call that argument out.