Saint
Avenger
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- Jul 16, 2003
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Blatantly incorrect. "Bad" is not quantifiable, it has no objective value. It is a quality that exists in a purely subjective capacity. The quality of "badness," for lack of better term, is caused by inadequacy, lack of acceptability, disapproval, or moral failing. You will notice all of these criteria are subjective as well, which for our purposes means if Katsuro finds trash like "Cheaper by the Dozen" to be inadequate or unacceptable, then yes, it is bad.but to say that it's a bad movie because it doesn't fit your taste shows a lack of vocabulary on your part...
Curiously, those of you defending this disgusting turn of events (the selection of Levy as Director) at once claim that we cannot call these films "bad" just because we didn't like them, and that you can call them good because they made X amount of dollars. Why are your standards for quality (Number of zeros on box office return) valid, but our standards (Personal enjoyment, accuracy relative adapted materials) not? Dollar signs are indicative of quality, but personal enjoyment is not?
Also interesting is that at least one person claimed that a high box office return is indicative of high enjoyment. How is this? One does not enjoy or dislike the film until after the fee has been paid. The returns will be the same (with some minor variation for negative or positive word-of-mouth) whether the film is enjoyed or not. I suppose it's possible word-of-mouth causes more variation than what I guess, but in the end, that too, is irrelevant, because "The Flash" is not a film that should be made with the goal of "acceptability." It is not a throw-away fluff film like Levy's standard fare.
Most baffling of all is that The Royal Guard of King Levy repeatedly assert that his selection is financially motivated--that it is necessary for the film to make money! HA! Yes, surely men and women will flood to the theaters because they are fans of Shawn Levy! Yes, we have seen generic superhero comedies like "My Super Ex-Girlfriend," "Zoom," and "Sky High" really rake in the cash compared to their competition, the likes of "Spider-Man" and "Batman Begins." Oh, wait: we haven't seen that. There is no indication that a generic comedy director is necessary to make The Flash successful. We don't need a Shawn Levy for this film, we need a Sam Raimi.
I know there is hope among some of you that this will turn out to be more along the lines of "The Incredibles," and that would be acceptable (though, as I have said, I prefer the Spider-Man tone), but I have seen nothing to indicate that Shawn Levy is anywhere near as clever or talented as Brad Bird.