Yes, but they're sort of attached...SideburnsPuppy said:Why would he use the large intestine? The small one is longer.
I agree with you fully, I just can't fathom how the AA-12 wasn't the coolest part of the movie to bob.zipzod said:Awesome it may be, one awesome kill cannot redeem an entire movie. The point is that a movie is better and usually more memorable if it has some substance to it. Example: Audience will be excited to watch characters shoot each other, but the audience will be much more engaged and interested if they care about those characters or the reason that fight is happening.CptShiv said:My only gripe is: How was the AA-12 from Expendables not the iconic kill? (or series of kills?) Say what you will about the rest of the movie, but how is an automatic, 32 round mag shotgun not awesome?
Well I can't now! D:Ask George Carlin
Yes they do. How often do you hear people whining about the same ol', same ol' in cinema? You hear the audience clamoring something novel, something original... And when they get it they go see a second rate action movie instead. The same thing happens with games, the same thing happens with books and music, and the message the consumer sends is that they prefer something safe to something new. That their dollars say something different than their mouths is indeed idiotic and getting outraged over something minor like a movie critic insulting them does not help their case. If they really don't like it then they should say their peace and walk away. The fact that many of them are still here watching his videos indicates that they have nothing better to do with themselves than be insulted by a critic they no longer respect. Movie Bob can't rob them of their dignity because they've already given it away.titaniumChampion said:I don't agree that people are a-holes that voiced their opinion and outrage over being called idiots. And to be honest that's not all he said to get people upset, it was an abusive thing to say and was unnecessary for a movie review. I want you to stop a moment and look at any other movie critic/reviewer articles to see if they attacked the audience of the movie. The audience does not deserve his ire.
AgreedAiddon said:This sums up WHY I could give a fuck less about Stallone's eg- I mean, The Expendables. In two weeks I would have forgotten about the damn thing, if that (I had Metroid: Other M anyway) due to Machet's INSANE beats. It's quite clear that Stallone's talent as an action director is severely limited at best; trying the shaky-cam thing in a movie like this doesn't work unless you know what the hell you're doing. Plus Stallone's writing peaked at First Blood and his considerable talents just continued to atrophy (which is mostly his own damn fault, the fool). Now that Bob (and hopefully EVERYONE ELSE) has gotten this out of their system we can move on to more constructive things...like plowing through various types of aliens.
I don't blame him to be honest, i think any true fan of the dodgy piles of crap (but inexplicably entertaining) 80's action films would feel the same way. When i first heard about the expendables i had high hopes and was expecting a team of old fart action heroes (where the hell was Carl Weathers?) taking on some cheesy bad guy in some stupid balls out ultra violent action scenes with a ton of nods and references to those crappy movies i (inexplicably) love so much.Krat Arona said:Bob, I'm starting to think you don't know how to let go. For as much as you seem to HATE The Expendables, you sure do talk a lot about it.
Ever heard the phrase "beating a dead horse"? Everyone else has moved on to other movies, maybe you should too.
Well... all things like this are subjective of course, and I'll admit right up front that I'm not a "gun guy" in the sense that I didn't really have a reference of what to "expect" out of the AA-12 or anything to compare it to. (When I play FPS games, I never know which gun I'm "supposed" to have a real hard-on to grab - I typically just take whatever has the most shots per mag and keep it the whole game and stick something with a scope in reserve if it's an option) Plus, the shootouts in the film aren't especially well-staged, so for me that whole sequence was just bad guys flying slightly further back and a much louder "BANG!" sound.CptShiv said:My only gripe is: How was the AA-12 from Expendables not the iconic kill? (or series of kills?) Say what you will about the rest of the movie, but how is an automatic, 32 round mag shotgun not awesome?
Just because he is comparing a movie he disliked to a movie he liked does mean you should come into this thread and insult him. It was one movie he got mad at. He has made many other good reviews and I we need to give him the benefit of the doubt.heamrh said:you know what Bob, get over it, your a snob it's that simple, so if you just keep that in mind we can move on to another movie, and you can keep going up your own ass.
I guess I missed the episode where they sat in the theater not doing an insightful critique of a film, but instead shouting "f*ck everyone who likes this" and "this makes me question evolution" over and over. In a film that Ebert thoroughly hated (North,1994) [http://bventertainment.go.com/tv/buenavista/atm/reviews.html?sec=1&subsec=1163] he goes over point by point what he hated and gave reasons. At no point did his evaluation turn to the audience, he simply mentions that this will be marketed to kids. That is professional ladies and gents.SirPumpkinLongshanks said:-snip-
tl;dr.MovieBob said:Well... all things like this are subjective of course, and I'll admit right up front that I'm not a "gun guy" in the sense that I didn't really have a reference of what to "expect" out of the AA-12 or anything to compare it to. (When I play FPS games, I never know which gun I'm "supposed" to have a real hard-on to grab - I typically just take whatever has the most shots per mag and keep it the whole game and stick something with a scope in reserve if it's an option) Plus, the shootouts in the film aren't especially well-staged, so for me that whole sequence was just bad guys flying slightly further back and a much louder "BANG!" sound.CptShiv said:My only gripe is: How was the AA-12 from Expendables not the iconic kill? (or series of kills?) Say what you will about the rest of the movie, but how is an automatic, 32 round mag shotgun not awesome?
But, more importantly, it didn't strike me as as much of a character scene. The two-man axe-kick, at least, you get the film's only real moment where two of these guys act like a trained/tested military unit - snapping into almost-mechanical two-moving-as-one action. Suddenly there's almost a sense of history and camraderie between whatever-Li's-name-was and whatever-Statham's-name-was.
By contrast, the described scene from "Machete" - while certainly creative and audacious enough to rate high on it's own - is all the MORE memorable because it's such a great character-establishing moment for the hero. See, the film is VERY consciously working to ram home the idea that Machete isn't just a mindless bruiser but a quick-thinking, highly-intelligent operator; which isn't easy to do without slowing down the momentum. So instead, they use scenes like this to let his actions define him - he improvises a distraction and a lethal-weapon out of stuff he finds around the hospital, and executes the intestine-swing based on something he overheard from the doctor. So while looking awesome, it also tells us important things about the guy too. Contrast this with the "arc" of the AA-12 element in Expendables, which is basically just "Terry Crewes tells us he likes his awesome gun" followed by "see? He told you the gun was loud."
Now, I wouldn't presume to tell Stallone how to do his job, but off the top of my head here's how that might work out better: Instead of giving Crewes the gun right off the bat, give it to one of the bad guys and have Crewes notice it on Stallone & Statham's "recon footage." Have him get all excited and geek-out over the AA-12's specs. That gives him two extra details of character depth: Surprise! He's the smartypants "tech-head" of the team AND he's crazy-observant about background details. PLUS, it gives the audience something to root for regarding him: We now REALLY want to see him get his hands on that gun. Later, during the big shootout, have him finally come upon the thing. Close-up on the gun, heroic music swell, close on Crewes, BIG smile, pick up and arm the gun, HUUUUUGE cheer from the audience, transitioning into sustained applause as he puts it to work - we're thrilled to see this gun that's been built-up work, AND we're happy because HE'S happy.
Easier to hold on to?SideburnsPuppy said:Why would he use the large intestine? The small one is longer.