Anything to get the real characters back. But I've resigned myself that a chance at live action for these characters as I know them is likely a decade away now.
same here for a proper ninja turtles reboot., assuming it survives Bay.
Unfortunately the stuff that he makes tend to not only survive but actually do well. Just looking at the abominations that are transformers and the amount they made. While turtles wasnt that much of a success i can see the 2nd one doing alot better which in the end is all they look after (box office)
As for getting the real characters back. Does any1 actually know how much involvement geoff had seeing as he is one of the few who actually worked at dc comics? I mean surely he of all people should know how to treat these properties and notice how much of a mess it was storywise.
Someone mentioned Justice League?
Here yah go
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Supposedly the movie division hates the comic/animated division. if that little rumor is true, I doubt that comic guys really had all that much say in what went on.
Just like Dan and Ivan trying to keep FeigBusters on track. or Kevin Eastman having 'involvement' with Bay Turtles.
My guess is these guys are there to make suggestions the movie studios could easily ignore...just to make it look like they are trying to respect the source material.
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Damn Smallville.
Set Super hero shows back ten years by turning it into a teen soap opera. can't believe I stuck through the entire series.
And going 36 seasons of having Clark being to shy to tell Lana "I love you" did not help.
This is something that... *whooo* *thinks how best to put it that isn't rage-y*
In gaming, I totally am PvE, rather than PvP. I am a coalition/community-builder. I believe in the power of communication and negotiation to solve most problems -- but also overwhelming force when talk doesn't work. I hatehateHATE story premises that are built around either the main characters being stupid or the main characters having a failure to communicate (or both, often the latter brought on by the former). I want to see stories of intelligent heroes being aware, taking risks with their feelings or personal safety because of hope or the need to do the right thing or whatever. A good writer can come up with many interesting stories where the hero(es) have clearly and engaginly said what's going on, and then -- alone or in the duo/trio/team that results from people actually talking -- go(es) out to face the unreasoning, intractable foe -- animate or inanimate, on whatever scale.
Sure, let there be misunderstandings and arguments and differences of worldview, but let them be as a result of them actually talking than not. Iron Man and Iron Man 3 (for all the latter's other flaws) are good examples of this. Tony takes the risks of opening up and confiding in people, he finds strength in weakness, he tries to talk people down first... And Iron Man 2 is on my list of movies that could have been great if they had done that. As I said elsewhere a while back, I kept waiting, after Tony got his dad's records and had researched his adversary, for him to get across to Ivan that he knew who he was now, he knew how their respective dads had been associated and what happened, how he wasn't involved and killing him wouldn't get revenge on his dad, and tell him he's too brilliant to waste it on vengeance and offer him a job the way he did Bruce. I wanted to see Ivan follow the arc of my favorite Crimson Dynamo from the comics -- hated Iron Man, eventually realized he was on the wrong side, and became one of Tony's fiercest allies. One of my favorite quotes is from Abraham Lincoln: "The best way to destroy an enemy is to make him a friend."
So yeah. The DC live-action division is riddled with problems from top to bottom. Having their TV and movie universes separate is a misstep. Having the characters so far divorced from their essential selves is a misstep. Having stories that would be much shorter (or entirely different) if people just talked is a misstep. Et cetera, ad very much nauseum.
--Jonah
I just rewatched the whole of Justice League Unlimited. Because of the bigger cast of rotating characters, I think it flows a little better than justice league.
That last episode by Dwayne McDuffie proves why the battles and the whole of Batman VRS Superman is so boring.
All we get in a big budget motion picture that cost who knows how much to make is....what?
A few shots of Superman floating. him pulling a boat to saftey. and Batman/Superman/Wonderwoman doing nothing but 'super punching' the main villain to death.
Yet, in one half hour show...what did we get?
Giganta swatting a bunch of para demons. Wonder Woman flying a tank into another flying tank. Green Lantern launching a alien drill into space.
Darksied DESTROYING the daily planet by smashing superman through it with the globe. Seeing Lex Luthor back in his 'power suit' still gives me chills every time I see it, because 'business' lex luthor hadn't been seen since the animated series...yet it struck enough of a chord with someone that they thought enough to bring it back for his final lines.
It's that level of planning and fun and just plane........we know what we're doing-ness.... that the comics and live action division just hasn't been able to nail.
Why?
To be honest, I wouldnt mind Lex in his power suit, as long as it was designed right, and didnt have that stupid color scheme. I liked flash in the show, but I was never really into flash the character in the comic books. I kind of thought his power base was kind of dumb. Its like he can do anything cause...speed? I dunno. Just never got into him. Youre right, they do have a lot looser rules to play with, and they dont have a studio breathing down their necks to make a billion dollars.
Yeah! Thats the one! Exactly, because we know its a cartoon. When you see actual(fake of course) buildings being toppled, it conjures up images of 9/11 etc, and it makes people emotional.
Well, it was Turpin, and he made an example out of him. Just to show Superman he could. I agree with that, but it was just handled so wrong. I think the scene that bothers me the most in BvS is when congress or the senate or whatever gets blown up and clark just stands there in the flames. God that movie sucked :lol
And yet it is one of my favourite scenes haha.
Given the same situation, what would you have had Superman do? Is it literally because he was still in the flames? That was shown not long after it happened, it wasn't like he was stood there for 30 minutes just soaking in some heat.
He was absolutely gutted, you could see it on his face. Guilt, sorrow, absolute sadness and he was verging on tears because he didn't look for the bomb, because he trusted humanity. It was a powerful scene.
Well, personally I would have him do a quick scan of the room with his X-ray vision, disarm the bomb and be like "do you guys trust me now?" and had him save the day. Cause you know...Superman.
See, I didnt see all those emotions you said that he conveyed in that scene. The look on his face was like he spilled a jug of kool-aid on his carpet. Like "awww man".
And why would he trust humanity? Does anyone trust humanity? If he learned anything from when he was a kid to an adult, and the 18 months between Zod and the events of BvS, is NOT to trust humanity. Thats the thing though, he isnt supposed to trust humanity, he is supposed to be their guiding light. Even Jor-el says something along those lines in MoS, is that he is the beacon of hope, and he stands resolute in his beliefs to do good. Fight the never ending battle...Not whine about how people dont stay good or whatever, I forgot what the line was.
Like Dan said, he didnt embody the character of Superman. Seriously, Zach Snyder just doesnt get the character. Bryan Singer sort of did, but the story was lame (kid) and he put all the gay undertones on it because Singer is gay. Aside from a few comics, there hasnt been a good interpretation of Superman since the Donner movies.
Well, personally I would have him do a quick scan of the room with his X-ray vision, disarm the bomb and be like "do you guys trust me now?" and had him save the day. Cause you know...Superman. Thats what I mean about the sloppiness of the film makers, they can have him hear a gun cock to lois's head, but he doesnt suspect anything about a senate hearing? See, I didnt see all those emotions you said that he conveyed in that scene. The look on his face was like he spilled a jug of kool-aid on his carpet. Like "awww man". And why would he trust humanity? Does anyone trust humanity? If he learned anything from when he was a kid to an adult, and the 18 months between Zod and the events of BvS, is NOT to trust humanity. Thats the thing though, he isnt supposed to trust humanity, he is supposed to be their guiding light. Even Jor-el says something along those lines in MoS, is that he is the beacon of hope, and he stands resolute in his beliefs to do good. Fight the never ending battle...Not whine about how people dont stay good or whatever, I forgot what the line was. Like Dan said, he didnt embody the character of Superman. Seriously, Zach Snyder just doesnt get the character. Bryan Singer sort of did, but the story was lame (kid) and he put all the gay undertones on it because Singer is gay. Aside from a few comics, there hasnt been a good interpretation of Superman since the Donner movies.