When will Disney do the same?
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justanicknamed — 9 years ago(August 03, 2016 11:31 AM)
Yeah, I can't see where hero's getting shot, showing civilians getting murdered, the attempt at murdering millions by Hydra, hanging a man upside down to drown in a sink filling with water is mature at all.
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KingChildKiller2 — 9 years ago(August 28, 2016 09:53 PM)
Yeah, I can't see where hero's getting shot, showing civilians getting murdered, the attempt at murdering millions by Hydra, hanging a man upside down to drown in a sink filling with water is mature at all.
The shot was quickly fast forward, could hardly see it. They lacked proper portrayal and visuals.
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justanicknamed — 9 years ago(August 30, 2016 10:52 AM)
What did it create or imagine? Just a different way to tell the origins, and not even an interesting one at that. A bunch of emo scientists who have no problem becoming weapons for the government and yet another stupid origin for Dr. Doom that gives him living metal skin instead of his brilliant suit he designed.
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Paul_Campell — 9 years ago(September 19, 2016 08:51 PM)
I agree it was very mature.
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zaphod08 — 9 years ago(September 26, 2016 08:03 AM)
I'd really like to know, in what way is this movie mature? Traditional Reed is the dictionary definition of maturity, but Teller's version behaves like a spoiled adolescent.
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KingChildKiller2 — 9 years ago(September 27, 2016 02:46 PM)
Dark gritty color for dramatic effect.
If you want convincing and developing characters, a well written script, good dialogues, an excellent cast, a great musical score and an attitude that rejects the militaristic habitus in general, this one is for you.
This is storytelling without telling too much. We have four troubled kids, but their background is not overdrawn at all. There are just some little hints: the impressive face of Miles Teller and the laconic remark "My parents weren't interested" tell a story that needs no staged melodrama. Likewise the problematic relation between Johnny Storm and his father.
Talking about Johnny Storm: the movie makers made him afro-American and used the character to illustrate the perfidious habit of the US military to enlist young black men with poor social background and dull prospects.
Please Discuss -
justanicknamed — 9 years ago(September 27, 2016 03:11 PM)
In other words, it was a boring, devoid of color, snoozefest which reminded you of DC's movies.
Talking about Johnny Storm: the movie makers made him afro-American and used the character to illustrate the perfidious habit of the US military to enlist young black men with poor social background and dull prospects.
Stick it up your azz, beep The military has provided countless opportunities and avenues of wealth for black men and women. The liberals and their racist policies have kept the blacks begging at the table for the scraps liberal toss them. The military gives black men a chance to grow as a person, see something other than the thugs in their hometowns, go to school and learn a skill.
No one whines about how the military used to be that avenue for immigrants, and that was before all of the benefits offered to the military.
If more black men and women would join the military our society would be better as a whole. They'd see that there is more than just the thug life and would reject the ganster life.