Sir Taxalot wrote:
How does the new Superman compare to the previous superman?
I recall there being a lot of negativity around Man of Steel and Batman Vs Superman, but I didn't mind them really. I do have low-ish standards though.
Also, the Superman before that (Brandon Routh)? - I forget the title of that particular film but it was OK for me too, but at the time I recall it was viewed poorly.
Man of Steel was visually a bit of a mess. A real victim of basically making a crumbling CGI city which then means that none of the action has any impact because they've tried to go too big with it. I'll take Terminator 3's stunts and set pieces over any Marvel/DC film in that respect.
This new Supes/Clark actor isn't the one. He's playing it for laughs too much. But then Cavill was the exact opposite. Far too stoic. Routh was okay but mumbly and that film tailed off hard after the brilliant opening sequence.
I think my issue with them is that while I've seen Superman 2 dozens of times (1 and 3 also many views), all the other ones I've only ever watched once. If I remember rightly, BvS only had two moments that I thought were any good.
Blucey wrote:
Getting the actors to play characters in the 1920s or whatever. Film Noir episode. Check.
Stuck in a bank robbery episode. Check.
Locked in some sort of vault/container/whatever as your air is running out and the partner has to find you. Check.
They find a dead body dressed as Santa but all the signs make it look like it could be Santa, except of course it isn't. Check.
.
Supernatural (which I overall really liked) was quite prone to that sort of thing too. Also way too frequent use of the 'in medias res' narrative where the episode would start with someone in deep shit and then cut to '48 hours earlier'

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ARGH! THAT BULLSHIT.
I hate it. Especially in films. They show you a guy looking a bit battered or whatever and then it goes back in time and now you know he's got absolute plot armour. It's so unnecessary. The equilavent of the bullshit 'coming up on this episode' nonsense that we've inherited from US television. Like I have to fast forward on things like Bake Off because, guess what, I want to see the events of the show in linear order.