That's it, I'm fucking done. Get the guns, ladies and gents, 'cause we're going on a witchhunt to kill every mutha fucka who watched Grown Ups 2 instead of Pacific Rim. Show no mercy.
It was fun, but I don't see the gushing. Maybe it is because we finally have a benchmark for giant robot combat. Michael Bay could watch it and take notes. Combat has weight, feeling, spectacle, and you can actually tell what is going on.Sonic Doctor said:A movie can be great without surprise. I wasn't particularly wanting to go see Despicable Me 2, I'm just not a kids movie type of person, but since my friends decided to go see it, I did go with them. I pretty much saw everything that happened in that movie coming a mile away. It was very predictable.RedEyesBlackGamer said:Yeah, the reviews I've seen are pretty masturbatory. It isn't that good. The main characters' robot does almost all the fighting and it is utterly predictable. I think that it being full of cliches was intentional, but it means that you will never be surprised. It was entertaining, but it was not the second coming of Jesus.
Yet....I still laughed my ass off, enjoyed it immensely, and say it is a great movie and a must see.
Seriously, if I had to be surprised by everything and everything had to be ground-breaking for me to call it great, amazing, and wonderfully entertaining to me, I would be an extremely bored as well as boring person. Really it isn't about how surprising a movie is, it is about how well a movie does old concepts.
I will be going to see Pacific Rim next week, an considering I don't need to be "surprised", I'm most likely going to love it, and probably as much as everybody else that is gushing over it.
Pretty much as Bob said about Pacific Rim, it is refreshing to see new IP in an industry that seems to not know how to make new IP anymore and is just relying on remakes sequels.
Considering how the things like J.J. Abrams trashing up the Star Trek franchise happens these days, I wish more movie makers would just go to the drawing board and make something new, new I.P., even if it uses predictable points from other movies.
Off-T: Seriously though, we need to run J.J. Abrams out of the industry, or at least make it so he can only work on movies that are 100% of his own making and bar him from doing "re-imaginings". Seriously, that guy and his team of writers are worth crap, when it comes to working on existing I.P., they don't know the meaning of the word respect, the only word they know is ruin.
To you sir i give my entire collection of interweb cookies. The thing that makes me "Not want to live on this planet anymore/weep for humanity" is the degree to which the internet is collectively losing it's mind over this so called travesty.Casual Shinji said:I haven't seen either movie, but can we maybe, kinda, sorta stop pretending like Pacific Rim is this landmark in filmmaking? It's just a big monster movie... That's basically it from what I've seen and heard. We've had plenty of those.
The movie apparently is doing quite well even, yet still people are complaining that another more shallow movie is beating it at the box office. Talk about sour grapes.
I think one of the big things is individual taste. I personally loved Pacific Rim and I am one of the people who cannot say enough good about it. Easily the best movie I have seen in theaters this year. But this is a movie pretty much tailored to make me love it and I can easily see why others might not.RedEyesBlackGamer said:It was fun, but I don't see the gushing. Maybe it is because we finally have a benchmark for giant robot combat. Michael Bay could watch it and take notes. Combat has weight, feeling, spectacle, and you can actually tell what is going on.Sonic Doctor said:A movie can be great without surprise. I wasn't particularly wanting to go see Despicable Me 2, I'm just not a kids movie type of person, but since my friends decided to go see it, I did go with them. I pretty much saw everything that happened in that movie coming a mile away. It was very predictable.RedEyesBlackGamer said:Yeah, the reviews I've seen are pretty masturbatory. It isn't that good. The main characters' robot does almost all the fighting and it is utterly predictable. I think that it being full of cliches was intentional, but it means that you will never be surprised. It was entertaining, but it was not the second coming of Jesus.
Yet....I still laughed my ass off, enjoyed it immensely, and say it is a great movie and a must see.
Seriously, if I had to be surprised by everything and everything had to be ground-breaking for me to call it great, amazing, and wonderfully entertaining to me, I would be an extremely bored as well as boring person. Really it isn't about how surprising a movie is, it is about how well a movie does old concepts.
I will be going to see Pacific Rim next week, an considering I don't need to be "surprised", I'm most likely going to love it, and probably as much as everybody else that is gushing over it.
Pretty much as Bob said about Pacific Rim, it is refreshing to see new IP in an industry that seems to not know how to make new IP anymore and is just relying on remakes sequels.
Considering how the things like J.J. Abrams trashing up the Star Trek franchise happens these days, I wish more movie makers would just go to the drawing board and make something new, new I.P., even if it uses predictable points from other movies.
Off-T: Seriously though, we need to run J.J. Abrams out of the industry, or at least make it so he can only work on movies that are 100% of his own making and bar him from doing "re-imaginings". Seriously, that guy and his team of writers are worth crap, when it comes to working on existing I.P., they don't know the meaning of the word respect, the only word they know is ruin.
Why are you blaming me?! I saw it first showing on Friday!! The Hell man...Teoes said:That makes very, very sad. You there! It's your fault! Go see Pacific Rim to try and rectify the issue. It's fun.
I would say a Kaiju just to see him poisoned by Kaiju Blue and maybe have his legs eroded off by that acidTeoes said:That makes very, very sad. You there! It's your fault! Go see Pacific Rim to try and rectify the issue. It's fun.
Alternatively, anyone else think we should send a Jaeger after Adam Sandler and see who's laughing then?
But that's the thing, really. I mean - yes, I'm not going to give anything to Grown Ups 2 (not that I know or care anything about it, but I certainly wouldn't expect much of it! Although Sandler was outstanding in Funny People) but no matter how much Pacific Rim might appeal to the limited demographic of the Escapist, I think it isn't surprising that that appeal hasn't translated into a major breakout success (not that it's by any means a failure!). It's very, very hard to get genre movies to appeal to audiences without any recognition factor. This is a movie with no major stars, no existing IP to relate to (apart from the 'it's basically Godzilla meets Power Rangers' hook), and whose only real selling point is 'It has great fight scenes'. I don't think that's enough.Caramel Frappe said:In other words, Pacific Rim made the fights so good it was like you were there. It was creative, well played out and didn't drag out. Not to mention that there were other designs and great structure towards both the robots and monsters to get you more engaged as they fought. Most people didn't go seeing this movie for deep story telling and depth really... we wanted awesome fights and they surpassed our expectations.
...
OT: I'm really, really sad to see how a sequel that looked sort of bad topped the best movie in 2013 in my opinion.
Personally, I liked the characters and while the drama could have been better, it was serviceable enough for me to emphasize with the pilots of the Gypsy Danger and the Marshal.Caramel Frappe said:Everyone has different tastes man. Not getting on you, but if you dislike a movie I can understand and nod in respect but asking why there's a lot of love for the movie.... well...Flatfrog said:I don't think I've ever disliked a movie as much as Pacific Rim. Sorry, people - and MovieBob, I know you love giant monster movies but Jesus, you should not have let this movie get away with being as dumb and cliched as it was.
I genuinely don't understand the big love this movie is getting here.
First off, it has been a long time since we've gotten a monster movie about monsters fighting. Second, there are giant robots that fight monsters. That's pretty new in terms of what we've been getting in the making (mainly superhero movies, cop movies, ect.) thus it's going to spark interest. Now, what makes it amazing isn't because of the fighting alone. Transformers had fighting with giant robots too but here's the difference:
- - Transformers fighting is choppy, filled with unnecessary explosions in the background, and you couldn't tell what was happening.
- Pacific Rim did everything right in the fighting. You could exactly tell what was happening because the robots and monsters fought slowly, yet in such a way it looked epic because of their enormous sizes. It made sense for them to fight slower due to their mass along the fact it was visually impressive in graphics.
In other words, Pacific Rim made the fights so good it was like you were there. It was creative, well played out and didn't drag out. Not to mention that there were other designs and great structure towards both the robots and monsters to get you more engaged as they fought. Most people didn't go seeing this movie for deep story telling and depth really... we wanted awesome fights and they surpassed our expectations.
Don't get me wrong, the faults are there too with the characters being cliche' and silly, but overall the fights topped those faults by a long shot. People who enjoyed Godzilla movies, or wanted something to be brought that the Transformers couldn't... it was given.
OT: I'm really, really sad to see how a sequel that looked sort of bad topped the best movie in 2013 in my opinion. Then again, it's the advertising and the public knowledge that harmed Pacific Rim. If it was done differently or have gotten more word, maybe we might of seen a difference. But alas, we all knew Despicable Me 2 was going to take #1 and i'm fine with that.
That makes scene as it seems to be focused on the foreign market. The fact that Kojima calls it the Ultimate Otaku Movie should pretty much explain it: this movie is aimed towards a lot of mecha and kaiju fans which reside in large numbers in Asia, especially China, Korea and Japan. I've seen the movie and it definably lives up to the moniker; I saw references to Evangelion, the jaegers look like old gundam designs and the Kaiju look like Old Godzilla designs but with modern textures and movements.Shinkicker444 said:Interestingly enough, I've heard from some folks I know that live in asia where the film has opened the cinema's are packed.
Good call. I didn't consider that and you're right, that could make an enormous difference. It's a bit like that weird Top Cat movie that came out last year - it was completely baffling to see that anyone had made it, but it all fell into place when you learned it was made primarily for a South American market where Top Cat is a much bigger deal, and only really released elsewhere as an afterthought.Izanagi009 said:Here is the odd thing; this movie, as discussed by me and my friends, was pretty much banking on an extremely small portion of the American audience but a Large portion of the Asian market.
I could argue that it had least have some character development. Yeah, Mako, Stacker, and Becket aren't the best characters but they had interesting backstories and had enough development to be considered more grown at the end than at the beginning.Chatboy 91 said:I'm telling everyone I can to go see it.
If you're looking for a rich character-developing narrative, Pacific Rim isn't that kind of movie. It's an amazing action movie, and well worth seeing for that alone. IT HAS A GIANT ROBOT USING A TANKER BOAT AS A SWORD! NUFF SAID.
fair enough that the Chinese and Russian pilots are not given any lines but they get across what they are: military minded people who work well in formation (the Chinese triplets playing basketball in perfect sync and Russians having bodies that look out of Spetsnaz training)Aiddon said:They and the Chinese pilots barely get any lines. Plus the Russians are of course monstrous ubermensches (Sasha being played by 5'9" Heather Doerksen and Aleksis by 7' wrestler Robert Maillet). I will give for having the central characters being comprised of two Aussies, a Brit, a Japanese woman, and ONE American...but at the end of the day the American is the main character.Fulbert said:Oh lol, and let me guess, they are killed off like 15 minutes into the film because Russians make great casualties.
My ex told me the other day she was invited to watch this film by an acquaintance of hers. I thought inviting a girl you fancy to watch a huge mecha drama is a very adorable thing to do so I said go for it. Hope she does.
Anyway, hopefully this has legs. Apparently it's been kicking ass in Asia. I would like to see a sequel if just to see what other Jaeger designs they could come up with.