Anyone who thinks The Punisher was just "running around blindly shooting people" needs to watch the last scene again.
He was fighting for a serious movie without any goofy **** in it. And it was contractually his right to have director and script approval before the movie started.
Yes, I know all this, but he was fighting with what?
There probably could have been a better way in other than jumping into a 3rd or 4th story boarded up window.
Such as?
Going in the back door?
Rappelling to the window from the roof and prying it open with a crowbar?
Wow me with something better, and more appropriate for the character, tactically and dramatically.
I don't know whow much, but you can't make someones face explode like that with a single punch, it's not realistic on any level. The Dark Knight was a **** ton more realistic and believable than PWZ, and that's kind sad.
You don't know how much pressure it would take to do such a thing, but you felt earlier than you could tell me it's not possible because a man can't apply that many pounds of pressure. Interesting.
The face didn't explode, as I recall. It was crushed inward. Why isn't it realistic on any level?
What about it being realistic on the level of realism found in WAR ZONE?
After all, you said "any level".
By the by, THE DARK KNIGHT had several "physics" issues, elements that stretch the nature of belief. Landing on a car with his cape barely open and Batman and Rachel not being injured after what looks to be at least a 40 MPH fall. Batman somehow managing to grapple The Joker's foot as he fell. Batman falling the same distance Two Face did and being able to get up, let alone to walk. Two Face's face catching fire and him still being able to survive, let alone speak.
I laughed because it was so cheesy and ham-fisted.
Fair enough. Sounds like a personal problem.
What ended up on the screen is nothing like what Jane said he wanted out of a sequel.
Nothing like it?
"The first one ended with him busting into that club and taking out all those people, and the second will open where the first one left off. It will just be incredibly violent and then it will just get more and more violent as the film goes on. That's the kind of film that it should be! It's a real take no prisoners punk rock kind of an action film, and g**ammit, it should piss a lot of people off!"
Jane said that while the script is not finished, he is working closely with the team. He said that he is doing EVERYTHING he can do to get the setting moved to the borroughs of New York and that Jigsaw is "more than likely" going to be the villian in the movie
JANE: The writer is halfway through a draft right now. We should be rolling camera with any luck by February. Jigsaw is going to be in it.
According to series star Thomas Jane, the wheels are in motion for him to slip that trademark skull onto his chest again soon for "The Punisher 2." "The script comes in a couple of weeks, and it's going to be darker, bloodier and more unfriendly than the first one," Jane confirmed.
Concerning The Punisher 2, Tom says he'd like to make a drama, without any goofy stuff. "Just straight noir, drama, with the inherent blood and guts in it." Jane also says it will definitely take place in New York.
Now, did Jane say he'd like it to be a straight drama? Yes. Was it? No. But it did have elements of a drama, and my statement was that WAR ZONE featured several of the things he wanted.
Streets of Fire, Extreme Prejudice, 48 hrs., and I think Wild Bill was a good as was Last Man Standing. The fact is he's made plenty of good movies, as for AVP he's produced or had a hand in writing all the other Alien films, he's been apart of that franchise from the beginning and his credit on the AVP movies might just be a formality.
STREETS OF FIRE?
EXTREME PREJUDICE?
Really?
These are your "plenty of good movies"?
I guess if "good" is "mildly entertaining"...maybe...
So what you're saying is...if his credit on AVP is a formality...he's done damn near nothing of note since LAST MAN STANDING?
And instead of going with someone with a proven track record such as Hill, they went with Alexander who made one pretty bad movie and a short film prior. Whether you like Hill or not, plenty of film lovers think he's done great work.
Now, when you say "pretty bad movie", you're talking about the one that won the following awards?
LA Femme Film Festival
Lexi Alexander won Best Feature (2005)
Malibu Film Festival
Lexi Alexander won Best of the Fest (2005)
SXSW Film Festival
Lexi Alexander won Special Jury Award
The thing is the dark comedy just fell ****ing flat. There was nothing serious about Jigsaw, he was a cartoon.
For you. Sounds like a personal problem?
There's nothing serious about Jigsaw?
The man had his face ripped to pieces
He killed his doctor over bad news
He stuck a candlestick in a man's throat
He made a very serious and corrupt deal with the FBI
He was willing to have an old woman savagely murdered, a child killed, and he did kill Micro in a heartbeat
But no, there was "nothing serious" about Jigsaw.
There were six drafts of the script and Lionsgate rejected each one of them, sending Jane, Beattie, Dahl and Hill with them.
And do we know details of any of these scripts, why they were rejected, etc?
Also, Guard, you're very dismissive of Hill's career -
What?
Now, please understand, I'm not saying the man hadn't had some success
No, I'm simply aware of the fact that he hadn't directed a major motion picture in ten years. You need to read my posts a little closer. I wasn't dismissive at all about his success. I simply made a point about the timeframe of it.
He certainly didn't "stop" with The Warriors. As Grundy has said, he did some pretty good (and in 48 Hrs case, excellent) action movies. he's got a way with actors, can deal with action and can apply a consistent tone.
48 HOURS was in 1982.
He made that movie over 26 years ago.
I made a very key point involving the years he made his films in. Do you not see the point I am making here?
In my experience, studios wouldn't generally pull a director who made a few decent action movies in the 80's but has not directed a movie in over ten years, and give them a Marvel franchise.
Is it possible he could have made a decent movie? Sure, it's possible. Is it realistic to expect a major studio to assume he'd be able to do so based on some late 70's and 80's action films? I don't know. I kind of doubt it. Again, in my experience, Hollywood doesn't generally work like that.
You sort of missed the part where I did a rundown of what he's done recently that's been of note. I said he hasn't done anything particularly memorable since THE WARRIORS. And I pretty much stand by that. I mean, I'd love to pretend people go around discussing the merits of 48 HOURS, or any of his other films, but I don't see that too often.
On top of that, he's a comic book fan and is very skilled at aping other directors. His lack of output since Last Man Standing is down to his production commitments and a lack of projects he wants to work on.
Is that supposed to sway me?
"His lack of recent experience is due to the fact that he'd rather produce subpar alien VS predator action movies"?
Ok, he's no Michael Mann but a director like Mann is all wrong for The Punisher. I think this would have been the perfect project for Hill. he's a safe pair of hands, brings production contacts for budget generation, has a history of bringing films in on time and on budget, has worked with stunts extensively and has a cult cache.
Hey, that's great. Good for him. What you or some fans of Hill personally think or know about how well he handles working on a budget does not change the reality of Hollywood.
Let's put it like this: there'd have been no gurning for the camera.
he'd have made a hard, gritty action movie with proper characters.
What are you basing this on? Have you read his Punisher script?
And more to the point, since you don't think Jigsaw was anything close to proper, have you ever read a Punisher story involving Jigsaw?