The Superhero Cinematic Civil War of Tomorrow Thread - Part 62

Here you go. :o

What about Batgirl and Robin fighting Joker and Harley in the DLC map? Fighting Bane and Titan Joker in Arkham Asylum?
Arkham Knight's boss fights are so unreliably bad and forgettable, I don't even remember this taking place.

All the Titan fights in the Asylum are boring. The series' boss fights on the whole are underwhelming outside of Mr. Freeze.
 
Arkham Knight's boss fights are so unreliably bad and forgettable, I don't even remember this taking place.

All the Titan fights in the Asylum are boring. The series' boss fights on the whole are underwhelming outside of Mr. Freeze.

Listen, I’d take all those aforementioned boss fights over the litany of those damn tank fights in Arkham Knight.

I’m still pissed about those.
 
Arkham Knight's boss fights are so unreliably bad and forgettable, I don't even remember this taking place.

All the Titan fights in the Asylum are boring. The series' boss fights on the whole are underwhelming outside of Mr. Freeze.
Yeah fights built on clunky dodging large charging opponents just aren't compelling. Not saying everything need to Souls, DMC, or Ninja Gaiden, but the boss fights aren't even compelling for the Arkham style gameplay.
 
Tank fights aren't even Knight's biggest crime. It's the fact that the predator rooms/stealth missions all blow chunks. The biggest strength and source of some really clever level design throughout the other three games... and they just completely abandoned it and gave the stealth missions an easy mode button. So, f-ing lame.
 
Ok, then we just have different views on that, which is fine. I just wanted to check if there was something new about season 2 that I had missed. I don't mind seeing Poindexter, Vanessa or Fisk vulnerable at times as it just makes them feel more real and interesting, but none of that make me feel sorry for them since they are all horrible people that do horrible things.
To me, stuff like that is holding him back from becoming the monster he's adapted from. Yes, I know, it's an adaptation, but at this point why not just go all the way with it?

For every scene of him killing people indiscriminately there's a scene of him mourning his old life or wanting to be "steady" again and I just....can't. Let him be a full-time a-hole and give him some agency!
 
Ok, then we just have different views on that, which is fine. I just wanted to check if there was something new about season 2 that I had missed. I don't mind seeing Poindexter, Vanessa or Fisk vulnerable at times as it just makes them feel more real and interesting, but none of that make me feel sorry for them since they are all horrible people that do horrible things.
They were vulnerable all the time on the original show. Just you know, with actual reason for it. Not manufactured slop that has nothing to do with their characters.
 
Arkham Knight still has the best visuals though. Beautiful game to look at.

Playing though… :sneeze:
The thing about Knight is that it's still an alright game, just a letdown compared to what came before it storywise. I wasn't gaming as much at the time it came out so Knight was literally my main reason for wanting a PS4 once they announced it wouldn't be on 360/PS3. Luckily Uncharted 4 came out a year later.


Also, just gonna leave this here. :cwink:


 
There are just some hot takes I cannot agree with. The Arkham trilogy being not top tier amazing games is one of them. Yeah, the Bat Tank in Knight sucks and I have some story issues, but that's an overall amazing game. Asylum is my personal favorite of the series. City has the best boss fights though
 
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Hellboy (2019)

This found its way into my digital collection recently, though I'd be a liar if I claimed it was wholly by accident. On one hand, even though I've never read a Hellboy comic in my life, I do love the Guillermo del Toro films; on the other, I'm something of a Neil Marshall fan. Dog Soldiers was the right way to do a zero-budget werewolf splatter flick, and I thought The Descent deserved every accolade it received. And perhaps I'm in a forgiving mood because it's Spooky Season and this is a superhero/horror mashup, but I didn't find the film as bad as its reputation suggests. Unfortunately, it's not that great, either...

Critically eviscerated upon release, the movie faced an uphill struggle as soon as it was reported that Ron Perlman was being replaced as the lead. While David Harbour did receive some praise for his interpretation of the titular character, a quick gander at social media reveals that many fans (anecdotally speaking of course) were unable to accept a substitute after Perlman's indelible performance as Hellboy.

As for the film itself, I found it serviceable if unspectacular, a classic example of a movie that hits the notes but can't hear the melody. Guillermo del Toro found the poetry between the lines of this IP dealing with outsiders, freaks, and monsters, striving to create a form of family for themselves, all the while warring between their base natures and the course that was set for them without their consent. On the other hand, the reboot is the first Neil Marshall helmed project where I questioned the sincerity of his direction and commitment. Marshall has been vocal in the past about his efforts to reconcile his auteur instincts with the commercial demands of studio filmmaking, his refusal to sexualize his characters in The Descent being one famous example. While all the requisite elements are in place for Hellboy '19 - gratuitous gore, gruesome monster effects, bone-crushing action, perfunctory efforts to chronicle the struggle of being an 'other' in an unforgiving society - the film feels strangely flat and listless, as though Marshall's heart really wasn't into the material. del Toro turned pulp into poetry; Marshall approaches the project as a typical gun-for-hire, and the result is one big shrug. When your baddie's swan song money shot is cribbed straight from Scary Movie of all places, Houston we have a problem...

Anyway, Hellboy '19 isn't a total write-off (I'd argue that no film directed by Neil Marshall and starring David Harbour ever could be), but I honestly don't see myself revisiting this again anytime soon, if ever. Not unless del Toro's films spontaneously combust, that is...


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To me, stuff like that is holding him back from becoming the monster he's adapted from. Yes, I know, it's an adaptation, but at this point why not just go all the way with it?

For every scene of him killing people indiscriminately there's a scene of him mourning his old life or wanting to be "steady" again and I just....can't. Let him be a full-time a-hole and give him some agency!
It's a fine view, not least since both he and Fisk tend to be free from that in the comics, in their respective ways. I just think it has worked in the show. As for agency, his relationship with the Fisks is ruined so if he's still around I'd expect him to be out on his own in the coming stories. I don't see him joining up with the heroes against Fisk, but then again that may leave him sidelined since there might be enough people involved already.
 
Sadie Sink’s character had seemingly been revealed and i just knew she was gonna be some lesser known character and not Jean Grey or Gwen or Firestar or Mayday or whatever. Marvel does this all the time, hire big actors to small characters.
 
Sadie Sink’s character had seemingly been revealed and i just knew she was gonna be some lesser known character and not Jean Grey or Gwen or Firestar or Mayday or whatever. Marvel does this all the time, hire big actors to small characters.
Who is she playing? In any case, it can't be worse than Giancarlo Esposito playing Rando McSnakeguy in Brave New World.
 

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