I think it's you that doesn't get it.Once again, that's how The Flash is in the comic books. Live action is different, but people just don't get it.
Well as I said at the time, the trailer was more serious than people gave it credit for, it was just a couple of humorous moments stood out in a bad way.I remember when the first teaser from Green Lantern was released. It was too light with the jokes and everything. I said Green Lantern should be a more serious character, almost everybody disagreed with me. "Green Lantern is fun", they said. "He should be like Iron Man".
I don't care what Timstuff thinks.And now we have Timstuff going like this:
Clearly, the only answer is hyperbole.It's time for people to make their mind about what they actually want. Should the DC heroes be lots on fun with bright colourful heroes who cracks jokes everytime the heat turns up? Or should they be put in situations where they need to be 100% serious and use all of their abilities just to save the day? None of them should come out with any smile on their lips afterwards, but be exhausted or shaken because of the effort they had to put into it.
I'd say drop Berlanti and his team.
I'd say drop Berlanti and his team.
I agree. Bring in a new writer or set of writers and they can either "clean up" the existing draft or create and entirely new one. WB knows now what they DON'T WANT to happen again, so hopefully they can learn, move ahead and not let Green Lantern's drawbacks withhold them from persuing new superhero franchises.
I'm not the one saying that only one approach can work.JAK: I am able to see a serious apporach working well. But you are just stuck in the comic book style and can't accept anything else.
Spider-Man. Iron Man. Thor.Think about it: more or less every superhero adaption that have a higher part of goofy elements are the ones that people hate the most. And the darker ones are lifted to the sky by the critics (and people alike)
There is no correlation between tone and quality. Your opinion is flawed.JAK: I see a serious version as the best way to go, because fun superhero films are outshined by the more serious ones. I have seen several fun adaptions of well-known superheroes, and formed a personal opinion.
Based on the tone of 60 years of Flash stories.You, on the other hand (and some more people here), wouldn't want a serious Flash because he should be all fun and entertaining in your opinions.
I never brought up his villains.But bringing his gallery of villains as an argument, doesn't hold all the way. I mean, why shouldn't his villains work the same way as Batman bad guys do? Take a look at The Joker in the 60s series with Adam West, and compare with Ledger in Dark Knight. It's one and the same character, approached in two different ways. No matter how you turn it around, it's still The Joker. The same can go for The Flash' enemies as well. We just need to think outside the box (thing outside the comic book).
Really? You mean if a film is bad that doesn't mean everything about it was bad? That writing and direction matter more than the details?Green Lantern failed not because of it's concept but due to bland directing and awful writing; we shouldn't let that discourage light hearted superhero films in the future.
From what I have seen, the more serious a superhero film is, the better it is.JAK®;20663743 said:There is no correlation between tone and quality. Your opinion is flawed.[/I]
Correlation does not equal causation.From what I have seen, the more serious a superhero film is, the better it is.
Fun element distracts from the story if there are too many of them.
JAK®;20669197 said:Really? You mean if a film is bad that doesn't mean everything about it was bad? That writing and direction matter more than the details?
You're crazy.