chosen1
Sidekick
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Fenrir said:Norse Mythology and a videogame called Xenogears.
I knew I heard that name somewhere before!
Fenrir was my favorite gear. His sword movements were gangster
Fenrir said:Norse Mythology and a videogame called Xenogears.
CConn said:Obviously, you didn't.
And you really think that's good enough?Wesyeed said:I remember the fifth of November.
CConn said:And you really think that's good enough?

CConn said:That's because you're awesome, Flexo. That's because you're awesome.

hippie_hunter said:No, V wasn't a homosexual in the movie, because in the movie he fell in love with Evey.
I liked V for Vendetta, I got it on DVD. It was awesome. But I have to agree with Alan Moore. The movie should have been a movie about anarchism and facsism, not right vs. left. The movie should have kept the books original intentions: a commentary about Thatcher's Britain not a commentary about Bush's America. In my opinion, Warner Bros. and the Wachoski Bros should have treated it like Sin City, a near perfect adaptation that would have made Alan Moore happy.
Batman Begins was just plain bad ass. Unlike V for Vendetta, you can't really make a near word for word adaptation like Sin City because there are just so many Batman stories. Batman Begins shows you how to make a Batman movie, unlike its predecessors.
ShadowBoxing said:I hated how they virtually changed the entire message and undertones of V for Vendetta. The comic itself is so much more layered than the movie which was turned into a political rally against George Bush.
V though is not a character, it's a story. It's important to keep a story intact if you are indeed going to adapt it. If you want a new movie, create one, but don't take a self contained piece of work. Slap five or six of it's characters in it and call it V for Vendetta. Adapt it. I get really sick of these homage or INO comic films.Chris Wallace said:It may not be their creation, but it is their vision of Moore's creation.
Besides, what makes you so sure THEY slapped that tagline on there? Sounds more to me like something that WB's advertising gurus would've done. I don't think filmmakers have any control over marketing.
