Thor: Ragnarok The Official News and Speculation Thread - - - Part 12

Status
Not open for further replies.
Tomorrow is the big day!!! :D

7:30 PM EST showing 2D Imax!!!
Hope you have a wonderful time.

This really is how a Masters of the Universe flick should be done. The aesthetic is on point.
I would be on board with Taika directing a Masters of the Universe movie. And Chris Hemsworth would also be my first choice to play He-Man. It would be a match made in heaven. :woot:

Sometimes we get so caught up with the excitement and energy of a new movie, that we forget about real world issues going on around us. I was just, very suddenly, reminded of that. A good buddy of mine, whom I served with briefly in Afghanistan, was killed in action last night. He was definitely more than “a friend from work.” He was like a brother. He’s being flown home this weekend, with a service on Monday. I had previously bought Ragnarok tickets for Sunday, but will be giving them to my neighbor. The least I can do is fly to NY to pay my respects. Gonna try to see the movie next Wednesday. I’ll report back then.
That's sad man. :(
Big hug.
 
Last edited:
Well I always go to my first viewing of all the Marvel movies in IMAX 3D, after that I generally see it again a couple times in 2D. I guess I just feel like it is an event film and the 3D to me adds another element to the experience that I can't get at home. So, it just makes it a little more special for the first viewing.

Surfer

I usually see all these big blockbusters in 3D but lately I've been very disappointed because the brightness of the films has been bad, which has hindered how they pop on screen. It also has made "darker" looking scenes hard to watch.
 
I usually see all these big blockbusters in 3D but lately I've been very disappointed because the brightness of the films has been bad, which has hindered how they pop on screen. It also has made "darker" looking scenes hard to watch.

For quite a few of the big films in recent years, watching in 3D has made the print look worse than the 2D to me. So I've pretty much stopped watching 3D in cinemas altogether until I hear that things have picked up.
 
I've given up on 3D since quite a while back and I kind of hope that it dies out until technology has made yet another leap. At least the best screens in theaters at times mix 3D and 2D showings so it's possible to see it opening day in on the largest screen without having to put on 3D glasses and dim everything.
 
[YT]2i9GCHzpxjA[/YT][YT]lZFiAx2XODk[/YT]
 
When I go to a 3D showing, which I try to do, I almost always go to an IMAX or XD theater showing. The XD theater near my house (Howard Hughes Center just north of LAX), uses dual Barco 4K projectors so I've never had any problems. When I go to an IMAX theater, it's usually the one at the Chinese Theater in Hollywood and they have the new IMAX digital projector with the upgraded sound system.

I watch 3D at home and my Acer does a good job (now that I've managed to reclaim it from summer college storage). I tend to stay away from the lower end 3D theaters so I don't know how well they perform.
 
Marvel Entertainment on Twitter.
#ThorRagnarok is the best reviewed Marvel movie of all time! Get tickets now: https://fandan.co/2y9whuN
https://***********/Marvel/status/925784511295586304

The @DolbyCinema poster for #ThorRagnarok is here! Get your tickets now: http://bit.ly/2lC1swv

DNj3gbQX0AEP-jO.jpg
 
Mjölnir;35892177 said:
I've given up on 3D since quite a while back and I kind of hope that it dies out until technology has made yet another leap. At least the best screens in theaters at times mix 3D and 2D showings so it's possible to see it opening day in on the largest screen without having to put on 3D glasses and dim everything.

Ya, it's that dimness the hurts darker scenes and action sequences when things are moving too fast.
 
When we can actually start having 3D without the need for glasses, then yeah. The technology used in the Nintendo 3DS is like a very very early prototype.
 
Entertainment Weekly
Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi on playing breakout character Korg and putting Cate Blanchett in antlers
Taika Waititi just wants to have fun.

The 42-year-old New Zealand native had one goal in mind while directing Thor: Ragnarok, the giddy third solo outing for Marvel’s God of Thunder: joy. “The main aim was, let’s just show people a good time,” says Waititi. “We’re dealing with a bunch of elements that are so ludicrous that they shouldn’t even be in a movie together. We’re putting Cate Blanchett in some antlers! Let’s just go with it and be proud of it!”

The film finds Thor and a ragtag group of frenemies — Loki (Tom Hiddleston), Valkyrie (Tessa Thompson), and Hulk (Mark Ruffalo) — dealing with a potential apocalypse, or “ragnarok,” thanks to the resurgence of the Goddess of Death, Hela (Blanchett). “A lot of days I was surprised [Blanchett] came back to work,” jokes Waititi. “She’d turn up and say, ‘So what are we doing?’ and I’d be like, ‘Well, this is the day you awaken the zombie army and your giant wolf.’ I remember thinking, ‘Uh, maybe I should just not say what’s in the scene.’”

In other hands, the end of the world would be pitch-dark. But Ragnarok is juiced with Waititi’s warm but wacky sensibility, as seen in films like 2014’s vampire mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows and last year’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople. “He’s insane — he’s like the Mad Hatter, the mad genius,” says star Chris Hemsworth. “He has such an offbeat and quick-witted sense of humor that’s unrivaled in my experience. But everything is threaded with a sense of heart.”

Waititi encouraged the actors, particularly Hemsworth, to take risks. “It was infectious, that attitude, and I think everyone was experimenting and trying new things,” says the actor. Adds the director, “Anytime we felt like something had been done before or something felt clichéd, we decided to run in the other direction.” And, as he did with the vampire parody Shadows, the director wanted to take a seemingly unrelatable genre of characters (superheroes) and, figuratively, bring them down to earth. “Let’s see these superheroes in moments where we relate to them, like where they’re being self-conscious and they have flaws,” says Waititi. “I keep going back to the scene of Thor and Hulk sitting on the bed, talking about their feelings. That’s something I can relate to, and I think most people can.” Waititi not only makes a thousands-of-years-old Norse god approachable, but he reinvigorated Hemsworth’s enthusiasm for the role. “I was beyond sort of bored of myself as the character,” admits the actor, laughing. “I voiced that to Taika and he said, ‘Yeah, I’m bored of you too.’”

The director and star also share some of Ragnarok’s funnier moments on screen thanks to the friendship between Thor and a blunt but sweet rock creature named Korg, played by Waititi in motion capture. The character is something Waititi brainstormed early in the production. “A lot of that grew just because we had such a good relationship,” says Hemsworth. “He would be sort of riffing in that character just for our entertainment on set. A few times I begged him to do that on camera. That speaks to the mystery and talent of Taika: to be directing this huge film and then to pull out a character that quite possibly steals the movie.” Waititi, whose next project is the stop-motion-animated movie Bubbles, about Michael Jackson’s chimp, agrees. “It’s not my fault that he’s probably the greatest character in the film and will probably get a spin-off,” he says.

Marvel execs, are you reading this?
Thor: Ragnarok opens Friday in theaters nationwide.
 
Feel free to vote in the Hulkbuster vs Abomination fight in the Marvel films threads.

The link is in my signature.
 
Ya, it's that dimness the hurts darker scenes and action sequences when things are moving too fast.

Yeah, I know I see that sometimes too, but I just feel like I do not have a 3D television at home, so I might as well go for an experience I will not have any other time. So, to me it makes it kind of special experience for that first viewing.

Surfer
 
Marvel Entertainment on Twitter.

https://***********/Marvel/status/925784511295586304



DNj3gbQX0AEP-jO.jpg

This is one of my favourite Ragnarok posters so far, it looks very 80's and fits the whole aesthetic of the film perfectly.

And look! Skurge actually managed to make it into this poster! Yay. :woot:
 
Reserved seats for me and a friend for a November 4th showing after work. Really excited to finally see it! :D
 
Created a poll to determine the MCU's best villain this year... http://forums.superherohype.com/showthread.php?t=535647

In regards to 3D, I am seeing Ragnarok in it and enjoyed Guardians in IMAX 3D but movies like Spider-Man, Civil War, etc...aren't very good in 3D. Like others said, the action was just too hard to follow in 3D while watching CW.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,289
Messages
22,080,720
Members
45,880
Latest member
Heartbeat
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"