(10-19-2024, 08:29 AM)Eric Cartman wrote: (10-10-2024, 03:06 AM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: Apparently nola is a little bitch:
https://gizmodo.com/joker-folie-a-deux-ending-spoilers-christopher-nolan-heath-ledger-2000508662
Quote: However, the idea was scrapped—not at Phillips’ behest, or even Warner Bros.’, but one of the studio’s other premier directors at the time, Christopher Nolan, who purportedly believed that only the late Heath Ledger’s incarnation of the Joker should be distinguished by the smile scar.
I mean... its a slippery slide from >implying heath ledger joker in other films, to whoring out his digitally necromanced likeness and performance in every ropey DCEU cash grab in perpetuity
are you saying that joaquins joker is anything liek ledgers?
(10-18-2024, 12:13 PM)Potato wrote: Finally got around to watching The Batman.
That was a good 2-hour flick stretched out to a pretty tedious 3-hour movie.
I blame Christopher Nolan for all these directors thinking their dumb capeshit is worthy of the extra length. I actually think that the Snyder films are the only ones with enough actual plot for the length*. What happened to BvS when it was stripped of just half an hour is perhaps the best proof since the plot falls apart. (Zack Snyder's Justice League is just him indulging with a director's cut, but you can see how there's a tighter three hour cut in there.)
The Nolan films I don't think match this, even TDK meanders in very boring ways, but TDKR is the worst offender in my mind because it actually starts off very tight and with probably the most engaging of any of the trilogy before shitting all over itself after Bruce goes in the sewers. The Batman absolutely feels like TDKR. It's really hard to see how a half hour couldn't be cut out of it.
Even Wonder Woman probably could be cut closer to two hours without losing anything. I think it's hilarious that the one film they shouldn't have cut down to two hours was the one they set a hard limit on (then reshot stupidly), while letting so much else sprawl towards insufferable lengths. Wonder Woman 1984 is the worst offender of the DCEU because there's probably barely two hours worth of content in there but it's two and a half hours long, while Birds of Prey feels so inoffensive because it's only 110 minutes. And Black Adam feels "better" than it should because it barely goes past two hours. I think one reason people are agreeable to the MCU is how many of them barely go past two hours, you notice the ones that go longer and how they feel dragging while nothing happens. Meanwhile, Aquaman, The Flash, etc. are all closer to two and a half but you have trouble seeing how they couldn't be cut even when they have more consequential plots to them.
I think Nolan's films and The Batman have the same issue versus their length really. They're "crime epics" but the setting is never established, only Batman is. The Batman is slightly better about establishing Gotham, when these obviously should be films about Gotham, not Batman. Batman Begins is probably better than its sequels at this even though it spends half the running time on Bruce becoming Batman, you get more sense of Gotham versus "generic city backdrop" in the others. Nolan's films spend so much time on Bruce being a whiner and trying to establish him even though he has no character at all, it's kind of amusing.
Ironically, I still think the way to deliver what people seem to actually want from Batman films is films that focus on Gotham and Batman is a mostly unseen force except for the action sequences. Instead you get these films that focus deeply on Bruce. Joker seems to get around this because Arthur is delusional, but I don't think you could have really given him additional films without running into this problem. Also ironically, Leto's Joker works better as he's cut towards this unseen force that everyone fears. People seem to think they want a Joker who chews scenery like Ledger's when that was more of a one-time thing. (Same with Nicholson, I think. The fact that we got two back-to-back seems to deceive.) I think the ideal way to deliver both Batman and Joker is instead to show their impact on Gotham and everyone else in it. This is the effect of Ledger's Joker because his purpose is incoherent beyond chaos, he switches from manipulating a robbery to manipulating the mob to manipulating Batman to manipulating the city. (Just like Nicholson's.) Arthur's Joker is somewhat similar and it seems to be Phillips intent with him, especially in the sequel. Also amusingly, this is how it is Azzarello's Joker since the Joker is less the central character.
Ultimately, Batman isn't a very interesting character and so devoting him nine hours of a trilogy will underwhelm but the "idea of Batman and how it effects Gotham" is something that gives you nearly a century worth of material at this point. Filmmakers, and Warner, seem to want to make the least interesting characters in the Batman mythos their central characters despite the lack of meat on their bones. I do wonder if The Penguin is evidence that Reeves may understand Gotham, not Bruce, is his real character but I'm skeptical. (Selina arguably should get this treatment. Somebody ship the powers that be Brubaker's run.)
*I understand why Endgame is three hours, but I think it has less plot than BvS: Ultimate and ZSJL.
(10-21-2024, 06:08 AM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: (10-19-2024, 08:29 AM)Eric Cartman wrote: (10-10-2024, 03:06 AM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: Apparently nola is a little bitch:
https://gizmodo.com/joker-folie-a-deux-ending-spoilers-christopher-nolan-heath-ledger-2000508662
I mean... its a slippery slide from >implying heath ledger joker in other films, to whoring out his digitally necromanced likeness and performance in every ropey DCEU cash grab in perpetuity
are you saying that joaquins joker is anything liek ledgers? I think it's more that DC films were allowed to openly use the "cut face", every other DC batman-verse movie would just use it non-stop and without any good reason.
I liked it in Joker 2 (obviously). It was a effective way to illustrate the point of the final scene, which it was all it needed to be.
I've watched About Time and Time Traveler's wife a bunch of time, and I just realized Rachel McAdams is in both?
wtf
(10-21-2024, 02:56 PM)DavidCroquet wrote: (10-21-2024, 06:08 AM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: (10-19-2024, 08:29 AM)Eric Cartman wrote: I mean... its a slippery slide from >implying heath ledger joker in other films, to whoring out his digitally necromanced likeness and performance in every ropey DCEU cash grab in perpetuity
are you saying that joaquins joker is anything liek ledgers? I think it's more that DC films were allowed to openly use the "cut face", every other DC batman-verse movie would just use it non-stop and without any good reason.
I liked it in Joker 2 (obviously). It was a effective way to illustrate the point of the final scene, which it was all it needed to be.
The reaction to Joker 2, and best seen in the early discussions, highlights what I imagine was Nolan’s concern.
My theory is people calling Inception smart and too confusing made Nolan think less of audiences. In The Dark Knight Rises, Bruce has a vision of Ra’s Al Ghul ended with a hard cut to waking up. Except at this point Nolan worried audience would think Liam Neeson’s character was alive and literally in the pit. So Ra’s awkwardly fades away, like dragging an alpha slider.
A “Joker” cutting a smile into their face, somehow, has people believing it’s an origin to Ledger’s specific Joker. Even if it doesn’t make sense in any other respect.
All that aside, the weakest part of The Batman’s world has been its Joker, and he’s cut up. Nolan would’ve been at the studio around this time with Tenet. Him being against it full stop doesn’t check out.
(10-22-2024, 06:52 AM)Polident wrote: (10-21-2024, 02:56 PM)DavidCroquet wrote: (10-21-2024, 06:08 AM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: are you saying that joaquins joker is anything liek ledgers? I think it's more that DC films were allowed to openly use the "cut face", every other DC batman-verse movie would just use it non-stop and without any good reason.
I liked it in Joker 2 (obviously). It was a effective way to illustrate the point of the final scene, which it was all it needed to be.
The reaction to Joker 2, and best seen in the early discussions, highlights what I imagine was Nolan’s concern.
My theory is people calling Inception smart and too confusing made Nolan think less of audiences. In The Dark Knight Rises, Bruce has a vision of Ra’s Al Ghul ended with a hard cut to waking up. Except at this point Nolan worried audience would think Liam Neeson’s character was alive and literally in the pit. So Ra’s awkwardly fades away, like dragging an alpha slider.
A “Joker” cutting a smile into their face, somehow, has people believing it’s an origin to Ledger’s specific Joker. Even if it doesn’t make sense in any other respect.
All that aside, the weakest part of The Batman’s world has been its Joker, and he’s cut up. Nolan would’ve been at the studio around this time with Tenet. Him being against it full stop doesn’t check out. This part confused me a lot about the Joker 2 reception...I thought if it was going to be a reference to anything, it would've been Pattinson's The Batman's Joker (cool possessives!). Heath Ledger's joker is a mystery man from nowhere...Keoghan's Joker is already in some kind of asylum/prison with his identity--potentially--already known.
But I also thought it was obvious that it wasn't intended to be taken as any kind of literal canon connection.
My reaction to Joker 2 is we need Harvey Weinstein back. This would never have happened under his watch.
Man, I loved the first ⅔ of The Batman, but once it gets to the arena and levy sequence, I was like "Why isn't this done yet?"
Anna Kendrick needs awards.
(10-25-2024, 07:15 AM)chronovore wrote: Man, I loved the first ⅔ of The Batman, but once it gets to the arena and levy sequence, I was like "Why isn't this done yet?"
Yep the Cat/Falcone arc is the best part of the movie and has a very statisfying ending. Zoë Kravitz absolutely killed it.
They kind of acknowledge this too by closing the movie with Catwoman again.
Although I really worry they're going to jump the shark with this stuff like they did with the Joker and make Catwoman trans in the next one or something
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Man, the advertising campaign for LONGLEGS was scarier than the movie.
(10-31-2024, 11:46 PM)chronovore wrote: Man, the advertising campaign for LONGLEGS was scarier than the movie.
Scary movies are few and far between. The last few to unnerve me were Bones and All, The Sadness, The Dark and the Wicked.
controversial take on Joker 2: the parts people complain about fine and pretty interesting. The musical parts are really bad.
Reminds me of the last jedi conversation. Complaints about what they did to Luke, but ignoring how bad the other parts were.
11-04-2024, 03:37 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-04-2024, 11:38 PM by Snoopy.)
Welp. I think I've seen my favorite film of the year. Strange Darling. I won't say anything about it because it's one of those films people should know as little as possible about going in. All I'll say is the actress deserves an Oscar nomination
Watched Trap last night.
shyamalan what is you doing baby?
(11-10-2024, 03:32 PM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: Watched Trap last night.
shyamalan what is you doing baby?
As shit and artistically bereft as it is, it’s actually very watchable, somehow.
(11-10-2024, 03:32 PM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: Watched Trap last night.
shyamalan what is you doing baby?
Getting his kids futures secure.
Doing a better job at it than he did for Will Smith in After Earth too
(11-01-2024, 12:20 AM)Besticus Maximus wrote: (10-31-2024, 11:46 PM)chronovore wrote: Man, the advertising campaign for LONGLEGS was scarier than the movie.
Scary movies are few and far between. The last few to unnerve me were Bones and All, The Sadness, The Dark and the Wicked.
Thanks, I added both to my list. The Sadness looks really fucking unsettling.
(11-10-2024, 03:32 PM)Cauliflower Of Love wrote: Watched Trap last night.
shyamalan what is you doing baby? I did appreciate how it gets worse as it goes on in an almost exactly linear way.
Watching Brothers with Gyllenhall, and I'm realizing this movie and homeland have all the same beats for their premise.
Also, gyllenhall mmm
Ok last thing. The movie The Nines with ryan reynolds.
It's a movie about an actor who is a narcissistic, and basically ends up that he's god and it goes through a bunch of different variations of timelines before he realizes.
The intro to the movie, you just see someone tieing up something with a green string, and then it becomes a multithreaded braid. (string theory at the time)
This is basically the what Loki is.
Has reynolds been behind the MCU this whole time?
I watched the remake of Speak No Evil. Plenty of changes to suit using Americans as the victim family, but they work well. James MacAvoy impresses at every turn. Original is still superior but this was a good film that I am still thinking about a day later. Not many of those lately.
(11-19-2024, 09:36 PM)chronovore wrote: I watched the remake of Speak No Evil. Plenty of changes to suit using Americans as the victim family, but they work well. James MacAvoy impresses at every turn. Original is still superior but this was a good film that I am still thinking about a day later. Not many of those lately.
Gotta watch this. James Mcavoy is my all five on my list.
I can stop jacking off to the idea of melissa mcarthy and ryan reynolds going at it, bless the nines.
I've also been rewatching schindlers list over the past few days. It's like 3 hours! Had to a couple of sittings.
I can't believe anyone tried to break down Liam Neeson.
This man is off limits for the job he did in this movie.
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