MadVillainy
C'mon Son
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None of us not gonna "win" the argument with him. Just let it go.
That's because what you mentioned has nothing to do with being coherent, it's just missing, and uneeded, information that can be easily implied. It doesn't make anything confusing, and the addition of a 1 minute scene of Peter signing the accords is unnecessary.
Lex Luthor cutting open his hand and dumping the body of Zod into alien water and having it transform into Doomsday is incoherent because it never tells us why this happens. Or why Lex knows about it.
If you'd defaulted to Thor in AoU, I'd have agreed. What you mentioned is frivilous.
MCU movies are significantly more coherent than what I've seen in the DCEU so far. You may disagree, but those paid to review movies have almost universally brought the point up.
Have you all seen honest trailers breakdown of Lex Luthor's plan? It clearly lays out how it's anything but coherent, sensible, and within reason, even for a superhero film.
But if you perform Olympic leaps of logic and justification, as well as inventing motivation that's not in the film, then it kinda makes half a sense.
I think you need to go back and revisit that breakdown. They flat out say "this is too complicated, you don't need to throw everything including the kitchen sink in the bad Guy's plan". Doesn't sound like a ringing endorsement of coherency to me, but think what you'd like.
I really want WB/DC to succeed...I really do...they are a legit company and not just leaching some other company's IPs **cough**Fox**cough**. Also I truly love Batman and his universe and most stories involving both Batman and Superman. But let's be honest. WB/DC is a hot mess!
DC's problems are so many too count:
1) Too much too soon. Relax and take your time developing your core characters first.
2) Zack Snyder. He's awful. Seriously awful. Watch MoS again (if you can stomach it). It's a miserable piece of garbage that has virtually no characters worth caring about, nor a compelling plot. The only thing Zack cares about is getting the "money shot" visuals and then moving on to the next one. I can not believe that DC gave him the keys to the kingdom after that dreadful film.
3) It's not that DC's films are "not fun" (although they aren't) it's that they are "not human". There's no humanity to any of these characters. Those little moments that make them people. Watch the Marvel films, each character matters and grows as not just a hero but a person. Civil War is a masterpiece because it took characters we cared a lot about and placed them in a challenging position that allows us to analyze how they have grown. We CARED about Tony and Steve. Did anyone care about Bruce and Clark?
4) There's no art to DC's films. People call the Marvel movies "light and fun", and at times they are, but many of them (particularly the elite ones) are full of depth, meaning, and questions about the human condition (The Avengers, Iron Man, Civil War, Winter Soldier, etc.). They are just approached in a more welcoming way through the use of likable and familiar characters. I'm not sure what the message of MoS was aside from Snyder's blatantly ham-fisted attempts at "Christ/American" symbolism. Go back and watch The Dark Knight or Civil War if you want to see superhero films that are also works of art.
They must be doing something wrong. Deadpool out grossed Batman and Superman in the US. As well as becoming a more likeable and popular character than Superman.
They must be doing something wrong. Deadpool out grossed Batman and Superman in the US. As well as becoming a more likeable and popular character than Superman.
At the end of the day, a film about Superman shouldn't be polarising. It's as simple as that.
The difference between Marvel and DC? Why does Marvel get favourable treatment? It's because they've EARNED it. They've earned it by making c listers a listers. They nail their characters. They show faith in their characters and bring them to the screen with respect. Audiences can overlook flaws in the plot if they are engaged by the characters.
Evidentally, DC cannot make an engaging character.
I mean look at the approaches to Captain America and Superman. It tells you everything you need to know. Marvel showed faith in their boyscout. DC hired a guy who clearly thinks Superman is pretty lame. Snyder himself said that Superman needs "growing up".
It's success was down to him being a charming and engaging character. The film makers and Reynolds made this sociopath likeable and sympathetic... which isn't easy.
Audiences want to see these films for the characters. DC can't seem to do their characters justice. Simple. The execs don't have the faith or passion required.
Good point. I forgot about that. Damn. This whole thing got off on a terrible foundation.
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Again, great marketing, great ability to explore people's basic interests. Maybe if i were a little more naive i would find the movie and the character amazing. But i look at it and i'm like "Yeah, ok, i get it. I know what you're trying to do. You're trying to manipulate me into thinking you're something very different and special. You're almost literally screaming for attention. But you're still not telling me a great story." The whole movie is basic a giant gimmick.
Funnily enough that's how I viewed BvS. It was trying too hard to be serious and philosophical... it was literally screaming PLEASE TAKE ME SERIOUSLY!
But in reality it was about as deep as a puddle and more in line with the idiots guide to philosophy. Throwing religious themes and philosophical quotes doesn't make something intelligent or mature.
Whatever Lex Luthor did with Zod's body was the result of the knowledge he gathered from that first time he was in the ship. He obviously created Doomsday as a back up plan, to destroy Superman. This is better implied than anything in the CW scene i mentioned and a lot more in tune with the character's motivations.
And it has a lot to do with being coherent. Going from feeling seriously affected by the death of inoccent people to manipulating a kid into putting his life in even more dangerous is highly incoherent. Allowing an outsider to fight alongside you when your whole thing is "we have to play by the book" is incoherent. It breaks the logic of the character and the narrative.
Coherency Breakdown Time:
Lex has a file on all of the superhumans, yet doesn't have anything on Superman, despite knowing who he is. It's also missing a lot of files on the characters from Suicide Squad...But wait, isn't that where he learns that Superman is weak to kryptonite?
Superman can hear Lois fall from a building miles away and can fly to her in enough time to save her, yet can't do the same for his mother. We're also shown that he can do the same for Lois from around the world (intro) and while he's fighting Doomsday.
Also the selective hearing with the bomb becomes more apparent with this.
Lois throws the kryptonite spear away from Superman (apparently learning that it weakens him), and then develops the knowledge that the heroes need it to kill Doomsday from.... nowhere.
Batman spends the entire movie telling us that Superman is a potential threat, and even if there's a 1% chance of him turning on us, he must be killed. But their mom's have the same name, so that doesn't matter anymore.
Zero explanation as to why Zod turns into Doomsday. Just Lex blood, mystic water, and science magic.
Literally everything with the Senate build and scene. It goes nowhere, and it just disappears from the story after the bombing. Why was it even in the movie?
Pretty much everything Lex did in the movie. What was his motivation? I just read three articles where they try to figure it out in an attempt to make a point about this.
The Knightmare sequences. Yes, with knowledge of the comics they make a bit of sense. But to most, it's just an action sequence with a bunch of random stuff thrown in and then the weird Flash cameo that no one understood. It comes out of nowhere and is given no explanation at all.
The editing. Pretty much all of it.
That's all for now. I may give it another watch to pick up on anything else later.
I also still disagree with the Spider-Man argument. He was already fighting crime against in NYC, where you can assume criminals are more than ready to seriously injure or kill Spidey. Ironman asked him to fight other superheroes who he knows won't kill him, in an attempt to subdue them. Add to that that Spider-Man has a more powerful ability set than anyone on Team Cap outside of Scarlet Witch, and it really wasn't that much danger outside of potentially being hit around by people significantly weaker than him.
Having an outsider fight is not incoherent, as BP was already there. Have him sign the Accords, then boom, he's playing by the books. But if we need more things explained to us via exposition next time, I'm sure Marvel can borrow Lois Lane for a minute to hop in when she's needed.
Do you really think there is ANYONE in this forum who thinks BvS doesn't have plot holes? If so, you're very naive, sir. Nobody has been claiming such thing. But plot holes all movies have. All movies have inconsistencies. Especially movies who deal with these type of characters.