This is honestly a very unfair way of painting it. Having just seen it I can tell you there sure is that man vs nature and who's the real monster theme that's basically the overt driving force behind half the movie's run time. The third act is basically driven by this entirely.Hawki said:So basically it took an already silly premise (original King Kong concept), took out any nuance from that premise (man vs. nature, 'true beauty,' "who's the real monster?"), and sacrificed it at the altar of a cinematic universe like the natives do for Ann?
Wouldnyou say thinsnis too scary for an 9 year old?Marter said:Kong - Skull Island - Welcome to Viet-Kong
Kong: Skull Island reboots the Kong franchise by enlarging its big ape even further and shrinking how much we should care about anyone involved.
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I mean, I would let a 9-year-old see it. But I've seen other places suggest 10 or 12. Depends on the kid. It's a little more violent than the Marvel movies; more deaths and destruction, although nothing graphic. You could check out a site like kids-in-mind if you're really concerned. It details all that happens but tries to keep it mostly spoiler free. Like, instead of saying what happens to a character, it'll just say "a man gets shot" or whatever.bjj hero said:Wouldnyou say thinsnis too scary for an 9 year old?Marter said:Kong - Skull Island - Welcome to Viet-Kong
Kong: Skull Island reboots the Kong franchise by enlarging its big ape even further and shrinking how much we should care about anyone involved.
Read Full Article
He has seen Guardians of the Galaxy, the avengers movie and the civil war movie. We have an understanding that if he repeats any of Peter Quills potty mouth then it is the last film he sees until he can buy his own ticket.
Thank you, Ill maybe watch it first without him before deciding.Marter said:I mean, I would let a 9-year-old see it. But I've seen other places suggest 10 or 12. Depends on the kid. It's a little more violent than the Marvel movies; more deaths and destruction, although nothing graphic. You could check out a site like kids-in-mind if you're really concerned. It details all that happens but tries to keep it mostly spoiler free. Like, instead of saying what happens to a character, it'll just say "a man gets shot" or whatever.bjj hero said:Wouldnyou say thinsnis too scary for an 9 year old?Marter said:Kong - Skull Island - Welcome to Viet-Kong
Kong: Skull Island reboots the Kong franchise by enlarging its big ape even further and shrinking how much we should care about anyone involved.
Read Full Article
He has seen Guardians of the Galaxy, the avengers movie and the civil war movie. We have an understanding that if he repeats any of Peter Quills potty mouth then it is the last film he sees until he can buy his own ticket.
Anyway, here's a link to that: http://kids-in-mind.com/k/kongskullisland.htm
First of all, the pun, it burns. I like it. I just got back from seeing this at the Emagine and I loved it! Skull Island fixed every single problem I had with the newest Godzilla and the 2005 Kong. Not overly long, 50/50 on the monster and humans, and making the human actually interesting and entertaining. Godzilla's problem was that so many of the human characters were boring as fuck. I so can't wait for this to hit blu-ray.Marter said:Kong - Skull Island - Welcome to Viet-Kong
Kong: Skull Island reboots the Kong franchise by enlarging its big ape even further and shrinking how much we should care about anyone involved.
Read Full Article
Yeah, no way in hell would I bring anyone younger than 13 to this movie. I screamed out loud at one point, because my friend freaked out at a jump scare that I already knew was coming. He was sitting right beside me, and his sudden shrieking scared the fuck out of me.BuildsLegos said:Sounds to me like Marter is selling the violence short; there's a mouth-impalement and, if I heard correctly, a man getting torn apart mostly off-screen loses his leg in front of the camera.bjj hero said:Thank you, Ill maybe watch it first without him before deciding.
It's all the same to me, though; any movie with a whole cast of monsters will have me pondering which one is my favorite.
I've seen the movie and stand by the statement - the only thing I'd partly take back is the "altar of a cinematic universe" because to its credit, while the film does hint at further monsters (e.g. the hollow earth element), it does it in a way that feels natural to the plot (e.g. directly explains how the skull monsters operate).Zontar said:This is honestly a very unfair way of painting it. Having just seen it I can tell you there sure is that man vs nature and who's the real monster theme that's basically the overt driving force behind half the movie's run time. The third act is basically driven by this entirely.Hawki said:So basically it took an already silly premise (original King Kong concept), took out any nuance from that premise (man vs. nature, 'true beauty,' "who's the real monster?"), and sacrificed it at the altar of a cinematic universe like the natives do for Ann?
I wouldn't say they removed it entirely, they just did it differently. More skewed towards being anti-war than condemning the exploitation of nature.Hawki said:"Here we have a very expensive monster movie that doesn't have any pretenses about being anything more than a very expensive monster movie - except that it also has to kind of, sort of, continue to establish the very expensive giant monster movie universe."
So basically it took an already silly premise (original King Kong concept), took out any nuance from that premise (man vs. nature, 'true beauty,' "who's the real monster?"), and sacrificed it at the altar of a cinematic universe like the natives do for Ann?
Why am I not surprised?
"Skewered" towards anti-war is a claim I can sort of get behind, but I feel that's giving the film too much credit. The story never really goes beyond "war is bad, m'kay?"RedDeadFred said:I wouldn't say they removed it entirely, they just did it differently. More skewed towards being anti-war than condemning the exploitation of nature.