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i stilll wonder how much Disney has played a an enormous impact on the great fall of Superhero movies. per Marvel .Spider-Man about to come out though and do it's normal blockbuster bonanza.
DC, did you blow another movie universe launch? Love Suicide Squad 2, Peacemaker, Creature Commandos, Guardians of Galaxy, hate Superman. DC should have just put him over the Supergirl movie if they wanted a Guardians of Galaxy clone. Must be some Tolkien nerds on the DC Board of Directors. One ring to rule them all! Why not just pick several directors and put them in the themes they do best? Even Kevin Feige proved that one person can't hold it all together.
The first 3 episodes have been great.Decided today would be the first day I would begin watching X-Men '97 new season. Best dialogue exchange I have heard thus far...
Bad guy: "Fools! Who are you to stand against THAT which is eternal?"
Cyclops: "In our time, we're called THE X-MEN."
It really is a shame watching a 60-year-old giggling like a teenager.![]()
Another thing I have enjoyed very much since X-Men '97's first season has been the episodes' opening intros. The intro was basically the same during the original series run in the 90s. This time around, each one tweaks the intro format. Episode two of the second season has the BEST one so far. For those wanting to see it without the entire episode...
I see bombs as movies that spend more making and promoting them than taking in money at the box office. Aquaman and Suicide Squad are not bombs for that reason in my opinion. Both movies' sequels were bombs, although I believe Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom may have come close to breaking even.i stilll wonder how much Disney has played a an enormous impact on the great fall of Superhero movies. per Marvel .
At one point other studios and directors were screaming Bloody Murder at how Marvel movies were smashing records and overwhelming other movie openings and box office numbers. Now that seems clearly a thing of the past.
And maybe now everything lies on Avengers Doomsday to pick up the public interest piences again
and DC has always had a tumulous path to superhero movies. All they knew was SUperman & Batman, with the exception of first Wonder Woman, they cannot generate interest at anyone else in th DC world.
Green Lantern Bomb! ...
Aquaman Bomb ...
Black Adam Bomb ...
Joker Follie Bomb ..
Suicide Squad ..Bombed ... ..
The Flash .Bombed ! .
.and now Supergirl ... Bombed !
- All DC studio knows (and confident with) is Superman & Batman ... it's completely Live or Die off those two DC , to even stand a chance. .
to me a bomb is a movie that people walk out of wishing they had not spent the money they had watching itI see bombs as movies that spend more making and promoting them than taking in money at the box office. Aquaman and Suicide Squad are not bombs for that reason in my opinion. Both movies' sequels were bombs, although I believe Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom may have come close to breaking even.
The movie that always comes to mind in budget to profit margin is "Paranormal Activity"I see bombs as movies that spend more making and promoting them than taking in money at the box office. Aquaman and Suicide Squad are not bombs for that reason in my opinion. Both movies' sequels were bombs, although I believe Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom may have come close to breaking even.
It would fix their quality but wouldn’t fix their box office problem. I think having some compelling stories and characters is a start. Supergirl had a compelling lead just completely done horribly. Which I guess goes to your point of well written story.DC could fix their movie problem in a hot second, but they're too stupid to do it. It would be so easy... Just hire the writers for their animated movies to write the live action ones and STOP letting the executives constantly make changes. Done. Finis. Then they'd have compelling, well-written stories that people would enjoy. Duh?
It's obvious the writers of the animated movies 1) do their homework, 2) are fans of the characters, and 3) Are going for story and not agenda. They also seem to suffer from minimal executive meddling. As a result, they're successful and praised highly. They keep handing script-writing and directing to people who don't seem to know the characters and stories and don't seem to care other than cursory research at best. Or get writers and directors who make changes for the sake of changes and wreck the source material, rendering the plot full of holes or the characters unlikable. I don't know.It would fix their quality but wouldn’t fix their box office problem. I think having some compelling stories and characters is a start. Supergirl had a compelling lead just completely done horribly. Which I guess goes to your point of well written story.
I thought Gunn was suppose to fix this…..which he did the same thing the previous people did hired a writer who didn’t even understand the material which is nuts.It's obvious the writers of the animated movies 1) do their homework, 2) are fans of the characters, and 3) Are going for story and not agenda. They also seem to suffer from minimal executive meddling. As a result, they're successful and praised highly. They keep handing script-writing and directing to people who don't seem to know the characters and stories and don't seem to care other than cursory research at best. Or get writers and directors who make changes for the sake of changes and wreck the source material, rendering the plot full of holes or the characters unlikable. I don't know.
Originally, I was tentatively excited about the announcement of James Gunn overseeing the transition from the previous DCEU to the new DCU. I enjoyed his original Suicide Squad and Guardians of the Galaxy movies. He possessed a really good 'feel' for adapting the material in my opinion.I thought Gunn was suppose to fix this…..which he did the same thing the previous people did hired a writer who didn’t even understand the material which is nuts.
And I get Gunn can’t direct or write every project but he’s suppose to be trusted to hire the right people.
And to hear him speak on some of this crap….Flash the best movie he’s seen, Supergirl
The best script….i enjoyed Blue Beetle more than all this crap released.
I guess Clayface has a chance to fix some credibility if done correctly but damn…
Yeah I always wondered why these guys didn’t have the comic writers help adapt or like you said hire them as a consultant.Originally, I was tentatively excited about the announcement of James Gunn overseeing the transition from the previous DCEU to the new DCU. I enjoyed his original Suicide Squad and Guardians of the Galaxy movies. He possessed a really good 'feel' for adapting the material in my opinion.
He may still have those attributes, but I am thinking he does not have the managerial chops to co-head Warner Bros. Discovery's DC Comics Studios. Tom King wrote the original eight-issue Supergirl: World of Tomorrow series several years ago. Gunn's take?
“In our story, we have Superman, who was sent to Earth and raised by incredibly loving parents. Kara was on Krypton. She was on a piece of Krypton that drifted away from the planet, and she lived there for the first fourteen years of her life in a horrible situation where she watched everyone around her die. So, she’s a much harsher and more <expletive> up Supergirl than you’ve been used to thus far.” (link)So, I believe he was versed on the material. Then he secures Ana Nogueira to write the screenplay. She's on record saying:
But what really made the "Supergirl" experience unique was that the creatives, including director Craig Gillespie, were all on the same page from the jump. "We just all saw the same thing," she says. "And we also had Tom King's comic, which was so helpful, but also [knowing] that you have to leave some stuff behind." (link)'All on the same page'. 'Have to leave some stuff behind'. Cool. That's from the screenwriter. Gunn tabs Craig Gillespie as the director, who had this to say:
"I very deliberately didn't look at Tom King's book when I first got the script. I went off of Ana [Nogueira]'s script and there was a grit to that and I really wanted to come from character. [Kara's] going to all of these different worlds that are on the fringe of society. I wanted to feel the poverty, I wanted to feel the crime and the dust and the texture." (link)Does not seem like the person responsible for constructing the movie was on the same page. Certainly does not seem like he even knew what stuff was left behind.
Perhaps Gunn should have considered adding an expert consultant. Maybe someone to serve as a co-producer. Or a co-writer. Someone who knew the material backwards and forwards. A human resource for knowing exactly what should or should not be adapted by Nogueira. Someone who could have advised Gillespie like, I don't know...
...Tom King?
Wait. She was on a piece of Krypton that just floated away from the planet? As if gravity wouldn't pull it back??Originally, I was tentatively excited about the announcement of James Gunn overseeing the transition from the previous DCEU to the new DCU. I enjoyed his original Suicide Squad and Guardians of the Galaxy movies. He possessed a really good 'feel' for adapting the material in my opinion.
He may still have those attributes, but I am thinking he does not have the managerial chops to co-head Warner Bros. Discovery's DC Comics Studios. Tom King wrote the original eight-issue Supergirl: World of Tomorrow series several years ago. Gunn's take?
“In our story, we have Superman, who was sent to Earth and raised by incredibly loving parents. Kara was on Krypton. She was on a piece of Krypton that drifted away from the planet, and she lived there for the first fourteen years of her life in a horrible situation where she watched everyone around her die. So, she’s a much harsher and more <expletive> up Supergirl than you’ve been used to thus far.” (link)So, I believe he was versed on the material. Then he secures Ana Nogueira to write the screenplay. She's on record saying:
But what really made the "Supergirl" experience unique was that the creatives, including director Craig Gillespie, were all on the same page from the jump. "We just all saw the same thing," she says. "And we also had Tom King's comic, which was so helpful, but also [knowing] that you have to leave some stuff behind." (link)'All on the same page'. 'Have to leave some stuff behind'. Cool. That's from the screenwriter. Gunn tabs Craig Gillespie as the director, who had this to say:
"I very deliberately didn't look at Tom King's book when I first got the script. I went off of Ana [Nogueira]'s script and there was a grit to that and I really wanted to come from character. [Kara's] going to all of these different worlds that are on the fringe of society. I wanted to feel the poverty, I wanted to feel the crime and the dust and the texture." (link)Does not seem like the person responsible for constructing the movie was on the same page. Certainly does not seem like he even knew what stuff was left behind.
Perhaps Gunn should have considered adding an expert consultant. Maybe someone to serve as a co-producer. Or a co-writer. Someone who knew the material backwards and forwards. A human resource for knowing exactly what should or should not be adapted by Nogueira. Someone who could have advised Gillespie like, I don't know...
...Tom King?
CRAP!Wait. She was on a piece of Krypton that just floated away from the planet? As if gravity wouldn't pull it back??

Supergirl bombed for a bunch of reasons. The star acted like a spoiled brat. The script had more holes in it then swiss cheese. Just a disaster top to bottomWait. She was on a piece of Krypton that just floated away from the planet? As if gravity wouldn't pull it back??
