TheMadScientist
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Today was GL premiere in Auckland NS, most comments I heard are rather positive!
Not necessarily so. You can have a relatively simple and even formulaic story (what isn't?), but the execution of spectacle and plot can be well above standard entertainment fare.The first movie, the introductory movie, is always gonna be formulaic and "safe". That's just the way it is. Especially with far out concepts like this.
I don't trust their opinion that the 3D is good. Early reviews said Thor had good 3D too. It was dreadful.
Ehh, in my opinion it was very corny. Even down to the names of things, the "rainbow bridge", etc
I just couldn't invest because it was so out there for me.
Oh, it absolutely could've been worse. LIke I said, I feel the Thor source material when translated to film is inherently corny. They did the best they could with what they had.
Still doesn't make the film any less cheesy for me.
If the shoe fits, wear it though. haha
Nah, it's just to me ..
Some of these lesser comic book characters IMO don't translate well to film. They are corny on the page, and becomes almost cringe worthy on screen.
I have a problem with the GL film seeming like its done completely in CGI. It's such lazy film making, and for me it pulls me right out of the reality of the movie. I would have liked to have seen some more practical effects, etc. I've literally seen shots from the trailers where the only real thing in the camera frame is Ryan Reynolds head ... haha. It's jarring to me as a viewer.
They should've just went all out and made it a cartoon.
For the amount of time they're on-screen, I think they could've gotten away with make-up and animatronics.They did make a couple of GL cartoons recently. My advice would be to watch them if the CGI in the live-action movie bothers you that much.
Honestly, I think CGI is unavoidable in a GL live action film. The constructs... how would you do those without CGI? It would look worse, no matter what you did. The suit? It would just look like normal tights/rubber/plastic armor if they didn't use CGI. The aliens? Animatronics and makeup might work, but it might look even less realistic.
Not necessarily so. You can have a relatively simple and even formulaic story (what isn't?), but the execution of spectacle and plot can be well above standard entertainment fare.
Star Wars and Avatar are the two biggest sci-fi debuts ever. Neither of them would be praised for their scripts. But the scale and sheer balls the creative team took to deliver something quite unlike anything else out there, is widely acknowledged.
It still remains to be seen how the final product delivers, but I'm just not getting that epic feel that it should be. The crew really painted themselves in a corner by constantly describing this as a "space epic" and always comparing itself to SW. Absolutely none of the marketing material so far has indicated anywhere close to that level of scale.
Not necessarily so. You can have a relatively simple and even formulaic story (what isn't?), but the execution of spectacle and plot can be well above standard entertainment fare.
Star Wars and Avatar are the two biggest sci-fi debuts ever. Neither of them would be praised for their scripts. But the scale and sheer balls the creative team took to deliver something quite unlike anything else out there, is widely acknowledged.
It still remains to be seen how the final product delivers, but I'm just not getting that epic feel that it should be. The crew really painted themselves in a corner by constantly describing this as a "space epic" and always comparing itself to SW. Absolutely none of the marketing material so far has indicated anywhere close to that level of scale.
Sorry, bud, there's too many positive comments about the 3D not to believe that it is good, and "Green Lantern" is not "Thor". The former film was designed for 3D.
For the amount of time they're on-screen, I think they could've gotten away with make-up and animatronics.
My biggest issue is with Oa. The plane is consistently flat and the foreground is so full of empty space, that even good CGI can't hide how the actors are obviously just standing in front of a bluescreen. Real sets, enhanced through CGI, is a far better method.
When George Lucas made "Star Wars" decades ago, he basically took the best elements from different action and adventure films and poured it into one movie. "Avatar" was basically cowboys and Indians told in a futuristic setting. Neither film was conservative at all, nor is "Green Lantern" for that matter.
Thank You. I think this poster has a better understanding of what works on film.
It's one of the prime reasons the original Star Wars trilogy > Prequels
The writing, scripting and dialogue isn't significantly better in the latter three movies than it was in the originals.
It's the fact that you can visiaully invest yourself in the world because things look three dimensional and feel real.
You're supposed to use CGI to accentuate viduals, not BE the visuals. haha
The whole movie is practically made in the computer. It was similar in Thor apart from when they were on Earth (which was the best stuff in the movie) ...