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8.3? for batman the cartoon live action if written by a moody teenager


3 hours and all they did was investigate? no character development at all? it's literally an episode of batman the cartoon. how did this get 8.3? i hope adults werent reviewing this movie on imdb. everything "cool" in this movie is basically what a teenager thought is cool. this batman is corny. the story barely makes sense. batman doesnt even do anything. he's just moving from scene to scene like a cop and investigating crimes. lol i mean really? alfred is like what, his fucking dad? he sure acts like it. also apparently alfred is like some ex british special forces who became a butler. bench press 350 and does cryptography on the side.

the action choregraphy is so bad. batman hits like he has no power. he hits someone 5 times and they just stand there. even in real life that doesn't happen. anyone else laugh their ass off at the neck bomb scene? the timer is ticking down. you can literally see how much time is left. i kept thinking ok this guy is too smart, he's gonna back away just in time before the bomb goes off. nope. he stands there at point blank range as the timer goes to 0 and he's shocked when it blows up. also it does 0 damage to his face apparently but blows up the other guy's head. the black guy from west world is just there to be the explainer. he doesnt do anything. just waits around to fill in the blanks and acts dumb.

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most people that like a movie will login to a website and rate it favorably.

300,000 out of 328,000 rated it a 7 or higher.

ratings are subjective these days anyways.

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The word outside the trailer park is “anyway.”

One white guy to a lesser one.

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anyway? that doesnt make any sense, the word needs an s.

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These days?

Hasn't that always be the case? I mean, all ratings are are a person's opinion.

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1. Batman's a detective. Rarely do we see him investigate or detect anything. I found it refreshing and cool that they took more of a detecting tack for the film.

2. There was a lot of character development. Batman has his entire worldview challenged, his past questioned, his goals and ideals come under fire. I could have gone for some more Batman/Selina stuff, but it was already three hours long...

3. Batman: The Animated Series? You're comparing it to the cartoon as a negative? I completely disagree inasmuch as that cartoon was amazing and remains one of the best bat-media pieces to-date.

4. There's always an element of "teenage/child cool" to Batman. "I'm gonna solve crime with my leather bat punches!" is not the fantasy of the mature. But it's fun.

5. Alfred does have a surrogate father role in Bruce's life, yes; it's been in the comics for decades.

6. Alfred also has been ex-special forces for awhile, too (comics canon). That said, these things get reimagined all the time, so modifications to characters are expected.

7. To each their own, but I liked the choreography and felt it kept Batman feeling like a superior fighter without making him a living god. He's vulnerable, bad guys attack en masse instead of one at a time, he can't just waltz through fights, and all of that raises the stakes of the fights and ups the tension.

8. Fair point with the bomb.

9. Geoffrey Wright made a great Jim Gordon, in my opinion, and I thought he was a good character, pretty well-used.

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"To each their own, but I liked the choreography..."

That hallway fight with the strobe effect of the gunfire was brilliant.

Although not stylistically the same, it reminded me of the amazingly choreographed hallway fight of the Daredevil Netflix series. It was all done in one take that lasts for about ten minutes.

There's an excellent Youtube vid out there where they talk about all the planning and timing that went into that scene (the Daredevil) one. They had to swap stunt men in and out with Charlie Cox on the fly by nailing down the split second timing.

I imagine it would have taken a similar level of precision to pull off the fight in The Batman.

If there was ever a Batman / Daredevil cross-over movie the Internet would explode.

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The gunfire lighting! SO GOOD! My cap is off to Reeve, who shot so many scenes in this movie as murky and fast-paced yet I NEVER lost the flow of it. I could follow the darn action scenes. So many action scenes are shot poorly (shaky cam) and it drives me 'round the bend. It works in a realistic war-drama where somebody is conveying the chaos of combat (Saving Private Ryan) but not in a fun action/adventure movie or comic book flick.

Still haven't seen Netflix's Daredevil. I don't know why; I know it's supposed to be good.

Mad respect for the precision here.

Have you seen Oldboy? There's an IMPRESSIVE hallway fight there, too. It's one of the best fight scenes in a movie (for my money).

I could be in for a Batman/Daredevil picture. Imagine the Cathedrals they'd both be 100% at home in?

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"Still haven't seen Netflix's Daredevil. I don't know why; I know it's supposed to be good."

Check it out for sure. DD, Luke Cage and The Punisher were my faves, particularly DD and The Punisher. If you like the moral ambiguity and quagmires of The Batman you'll enjoy these shows. And, it's not just the good guys. The bad guys have their own redeeming values which makes it hard to totally boo them.

Vincent D'Onofrio's as Kingpin, Mahershala Ali as Cottonmouth and Theo Rossi as a loyal right-hand man were amazing characters. Alfre Woodard in Luke Cage was especially good. After one especially good ep with her, I turned to my wife and said: "Man, that performance deserves an award nomination."

Tonally, these series were also dark and gritty... a long way from the brightly coloured big budget movies. They are definitely not for kids. I remember one scene in The Punisher that was so brutal that I'd be very surprised if Disney didn't cut it from the episode.

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I was looking for it on Netflix and it's gone. I guess they moved it to the Disney+ service?

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Yeah, sorry, I should have caught that.

Hopefully you can experience them at some point.

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I'm tempted to get Disney+ anyway, just for The Beatles documentary. I'm already paying enough for streaming services, though, and I really don't want to feed the Mouse of Mammon any more than I have to.

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"I'm already paying enough for streaming services"

I hear you. I was reading an article about Netflix losing subscribers and their stock price dropping.

Now that they reaching peak market saturation, they are considering... ads!

We've come full circle. :/

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It was kind of inevitable. They obviously can't keep offering content at the rates they once did and increasing the price makes people leave. Ads looks good to an executive, because that's how they think, but if they put commercials on their streaming service, they will hemorrhage customers.

Truthfully, what I hear most often is, "there isn't anything good on Netflix anymore," but what people seem to mean is that the original content is bland and uninteresting.

My best bet for moving forward (as if Netflix is reading this (?)) would be to stop producing so *many* shows and start trying to be very choosy in order to get a few high-grade shows up. What shot Netflix originals into the public consciousness was House of Cards. They need content on that level, not this six new series a week thing they seem to be doing.

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If you are outside of US theres basically very little other than the original content on Netflix.

Yes, Squid game already proved they can get subscribers with a small but high quality show, they dont need to mass produce trash. Also bring back mindhunters damnit.

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It's too much; people can't focus and love one, big thing when they just feel bombarded.

It's a shame they don't learn the right lessons from their successes (like Squid Game) and move forward in a truly customer-oriented direction.

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I myself liked Marvel's Daredevil but hated the Punisher Netflix series for going against the source material. I hated his origin being changed to his family and Army buddies getting killed by the CIA because the head of the CIA was having his army unit do his dirty work.

I also hated Jigsaw being a guy he served with in the army who was in cahoots with the corrupt CIA guy. He's supposed to be some random gangster Punisher throws through a church window. Not his best friend who betrayed him. Kind of copying Spider-Man there.

Then the woman who's second in command after he kills the corrupt CIA Head pardons him for his crimes. It's just not the Punisher I spent years reading comics about.

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Another +1 for the gunfire strobe lit fight scene. That was terrific.

Also the scaffolding fight near the end when he burst out of the smoke at speed and later leading them out of the water with the red flare.

All excellently shot with creative use of lighting.

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"later leading them out of the water with the red flare"

Yeah, that was an epic scene.

We so used to seeing Batman as a lone vigilante, punching and fighting his way through waves of villains. Gotham doesn't know what to make of him. At this point they're still fearful of him. From their POV he's just another psycho with a personal agenda in a city full of them.

Suddenly we see him as a tribal leader leading his people to safety.

The flare lent it an almost religious air.

Goddam brilliant!

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The hallway with gun strobe reminded me of Equilibrium. It also had a scene where the protagonists turns of all the lights and basically sword-fights a group of submachine gun henchmen.

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your arguments for it's ok for this movie to be like the cartoon is just not good enough. when we transition from animation into live action, there must be a lot of adjustments to make it more palatable to viewers. something goofy in animation doesnt necessarily look ok in live action. that's why japanese anime adaptions are horribly cringy. they're faithful to the anime.

why can't batman live action be immature? because we're not children watching this movie. we're adults. if this movie was geared towards the under 20 demographic, then it's fine but the way it's depicted obviously is not for children. that's why live action depictions of batman since burton have been mature and it works very well.

why can't it be a detective movie? because that formulaic shit is boring. even as a tv show it's shit but as a movie is unforgivable. batman as a detective was also decades ago before formulaic cop shows flooded the market. so batman can no longer be about him solving crimes. that's boring.

alfred being special forces in the comic reeks of them rewriting his story after the fact so they can make his character do certain things later on. it doesn't even make sense or fit with his role. why would that kind of person be a butler? if he was a butler for a man who hid his identity and did military stuff on the side, that would totally make sense but that's not what bruce's dad was. it's ok for a comic because that shit is for kids. they can make up any nonsensical shit they want. we're adults so we see the plot hole.

as for the choreography, if you say it's just opinion then ok BUT. it looks to me like pattinson is not a good action choreography actor and he couldnt have pulled off a better scene anyway. that's why it looks like that. it's not that that was how the director wanted it. not everyone can pull it off like tom cruise or henry cavill.

Geoffrey Wright as an actor who portrayed gordon was great. it's just his lines and his role in this story were awful.

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I think we're thinking of the cartoon as being very different. I remember it as a remarkable show filled with great storytelling and some of the most iconic performances of Bat-family characters of all-time, so a comparison to the animated series is a big positive to me. What exactly are you accusing The Batman of? I fear that, without some clarification, we're going to be talking at cross-purposes.

I think I misspoke with the word "mature". On a re-think, I wouldn't call the comics or the cartoons "immature", just that they're embracing of a certain amount of the childhood fantastic. Perhaps that's more accurate. They're never going to seem like Casablanca or There Will Be Blood because they have that childhood element to them, but I shouldn't have implied immaturity. And I would say that this film isn't immature, either. Again, I think some clarification is needed on why you're calling it immature...?

I liked the detective aspects of the movie. They reminded me of some of my favourite Batman comics like The Long Halloween and Gotham After Midnight.

As for Alfred's being in spec ops, it goes back to at least 1982. I just hit up my bookshelf and cracked a comic book (The Untold Legend of the Batman) that depicts him as a WWII commando/spy. I know stuff changes in comics, but Alfred's been a bit of a badass for awhile now. This kinda mimics Holmes and Watson where the good doctor was ex-military, carried a revolver, and could handle himself in a fight.

If I were guessing, I'd say that Pattinson did exactly what the director and choreographer wanted him to, and if he couldn't/didn't, they'd have had a stuntman suit up and do it instead.

Most of this seems to come down to personal enjoyment or lack thereof. I don't have the same animosity towards a more fantastic Batman (why I love the Burton films so much), or the moody atmosphere, or Alfred's depiction, or the choreography. I loved the film, and the aspects you dislike seemed innocuous to me, or were positive.

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" why would that kind of person be a butler? if he was a butler for a man who hid his identity and did military stuff on the side, that would totally make sense but that's not what bruce's dad was."

I noticed that the relationship between Alfred and Bruce is brittle. Bruce seems dismissive of him and Alfred seems annoyed with Bruce.

I had to think why the director/writers went this route and realized that it was well thought out.

Alfred is ex-military. He was probably a combination of butler/body guard for Wayne Sr. Wayne Sr. likely arranged for Alfred to become Bruce's legal guardian in the event of his death. He probably even arranged in his will for Alfred to be a permanent executor of the Wayne fortune.

Once Bruce became of age, he couldn't simply fire Alfred. Part of it might be a legal issue, part of it might be out of respect for his father who put so much trust in the man.

Alfred considers it his legal and moral duty to take of Bruce. Bruce comes of age and what does the little shit do? He tells Alfred that he intends to dress up in a goofy suit and run around after dark taking on the baddest of Gotham's bad.

At this point in his career -- year 2 -- Alfred probably thinks this is the stupidest idea ever. He definitely doesn't approve, but he can't stop Bruce from his mission.

This likely explains at the tense relationship between them. Bruce resents Alfred disapproval of his chosen lifestyle. Alfred thinks Wayne Jr is an immature idiot.

I'm exxagerating slightly but you get the idea.

In subsequent movies, I expect this relationship will thaw depending on how far into the future the series moves.

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You didn't have to destroy the OP like that. How will he ever recover?

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Wayne Foundation Burn Unit.

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Batman Begins that had him doing plenty of detective work. But also had time for character development.

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I meant to say that the emphasis in The Batman is on Batman-as-detective. Batman Begins had its emphasis more on Bruce becoming Batman than on his detecting. Other Batman movies have him doing investigations and pitting his mind against the criminals' minds (Batman '89, for instance, he solves the Joker's chemical attacks, The Dark Knight has him do analysis on the bullet fragments) but the focus hasn't been on his being a detective.

In The Batman, we spend more time seeing him searching crime scenes and trying to put clues together to uncover the identity, location, and plot of the Riddler, as well as nail Falcone to the wall.

I would also argue that The Batman gave Batman a really great character arc, as well.

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His Detective Work would been interesting if he solved the crime before it happened. None of Batman Evidence actaully lead to the capture of the Riddler. Riddler let himself get caught and he didn't stop the city from flooding. In this movie, Batman is actually a pretty horrible detective.

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I agree, that would be better, but I was pleased that they let him do any detecting at all.

This is actually a complaint I've had with comic book Batman for some time now. The Long Halloween does it, I think Gotham After Midnight did it (been awhile since I've read it), and generally-speaking there are a lot of Bat-books where he's always one step behind the villain. I think it's because most Batman writers are focused on making the villain seem nigh-unstoppable and a challenge for Bats. Plus they're also thinking in terms of action scenes, not necessarily as detective fiction writers ought to think.

So, yes, I agree with your point. I still like the movie, and I'm still pleased that they gave him detective abilities and scenes, although I do sympathize with wanting those skills to have more of an effect.

Thinking about it just now, it occurs to me that they easily could have done this. If Riddler didn't want to be caught, Batman finds him and is arresting him. When Batman first enters, Riddler does basically the whole "We got 'em! We're a great team and best buddies!" thing he does at Arkham, assuming Batman is here to celebrate the victory. When Batman says he's taking Riddler in, Riddler has his temper tantrum.

The flooding could just be a contingency plan he had. Something like, he told his followers that if he gets arrested then input such-and-such a code into the bomb system and follow through. He mocks Batman for being stupid about not knowing about the bombs (even though, how could he?) and we still get that moment (plus the satisfaction knowing Riddler isn't as clever as he thinks, either (not truly knowing about the Wayne-Batman connection)).

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Matt Reeves is 55. He's been making movies since the mid-90s. The moody teenager comparison makes no sense.

Hell, most of your post doesn't make sense. Batman "doesn't do anything", Alfred his dad, bench pressing? What the fuck are you talking about?

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alfred is very muscular looking when he's just an upper class butler. while alfred took care of bruce when his parents died, he's still just a butler. even in the cartoons he wasn't talking to bruce like this. in this movie, he seems to talk to bruce with too much authority, so like he's his dad. there's always a separation between servant and master. i've seen tons of depictions of butlers who took care of their master when they're children. there's a care taker dynamic there, sure but it's not father and son.

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I also noticed that the relationship between them seemed brittle compared to previous versions.

I liked that conflict between them. It makes way more sense at this stage in Batman's career, if you think about it.

My impression is that you just want a retread of previous stuff.

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no, what i wanted was a good batman movie. that's it. it can be anything, just not boring and nonsensical. alfred doing cryptography doesnt even make sense. that's ridiculous.

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when he's just an upper class butler.


Jesus christ...he's not just an upper class butler.

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Yes he is. Everything else is fanwank, even if DC publishes it.

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Doesn't matter if it's fanwank. Batman squaring off with anything above street level crime is fanwank.

But dismissing anything that goes beyond that because it's not in line with your vision from the early 20th century because it's fanwake is stupid.

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20 years of amateurish dross doesn't erase 60 years of professionally written characters.

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fucking finally. someone gets it. just because dc writes it retroactively, doesnt mean it makes sense. bruce's parents were just normal people and so is his butler. otherwise, him becoming batman was ordained.

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Dude there plenty of Adults who act like teenagers.

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That's exactly how I felt. This was like a moody teenager remake of Batman. Felt like something South Park could have made as a joke.

"You're not my dad, Alfred!"

Also, very weak that the commissioner used his own computer to access that USB-drive. A whole different level of idiocy. You would never just put a suspicious USB-drive into a laptop. Never. Not believable.

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The emperors new clothes.

It honestly baffles me how this film has an 8.2 and sits firmly in the top 250. But honestly I feel that way about most of these superhero films that attain 8.0+ ratings. I haven't seen the new spider-man film but I'm pretty certain I'd be equally as baffled how it's so well loved.

People (fanboys) just really fucking love this batman character and his arch nemesis the joker. Every time a half decent batman film is made the hype is unreal. Even the less well received ones (Batman vs Superman) have a cult like fandom who champion it as an absolute masterpiece.

So much fandom surrounds these superhero films, it's crazy. I'm sure that new Thor film will come out, make hundreds of millions, get rave reviews and be championed as one of the best things ever. It's like clockwork.

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Yet... you keep watching these mediocre movies? Seems weird, but you do you and all that.

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you dont know how it works? we believe these ratings. so we watch it and then realize it sucks. why did i even need to explain this to you?

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you're right about the emperor. not just superhero movies. i've seen it with so many movies these days. i'm not sure what is actually happening. is it just massive ad campaigns where they paid people to vote it or using bots? i guess it's not outlandish since we're talking billions of dollars at stake here.

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Yeah it's not just Superhero films.

Some of them are definitely bought and paid for. I've heard that Disney (among other companies I'm sure) wine and dine the early screening critics. Paying for their accomadation and meals, giving them goodie bags, letting them mingle with people who worked on the film. They get the red carpet treatment from what I've heard. Basically sweetening them up. Naturally the critics give glowing reviews as you don't bite the hand that feeds you.

I don't doubt this as I once seen a twitter user showcase his Midsommar (2019) screening invitation. It was a personalized letter with a little buildable maypole. If A24 are sending out goodiebags with collectibles then no doubt others do too.

With how movie criticism is now, they don't get to pay for everyone. On rotten tomatoes many verified critics are bloggers on small movie sites or even sometimes some random youtuber. Hence some negative reviews always get into the mix.

Critics have the power to irreperably harm a film before it's even released to the general public. So studios, with so much money at stake, do everything in their power to maximize profit.

I'm a big believer in people blindly following narratives (herd mentality). When a movie gets glowing reviews from critics, has a big marketing campaign and early online users rave about it (IMDB voters etc), people will often just hop on the bandwagon instead of standing out and questioning the movie.

On IMDB there are definitely paid for reviews. I saw one of the most blatant examples recently on Malignant (2021) of all movies. It was so obvious because so many new accounts were giving it 10/10 ratings with short broken english reviews. There was only 2 explanations, some fanboy made multiple sock puppets/bots and tried boost the rating of a movie he likes or the studio paid some low quality bot farm to give the film good word of mouth online.

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This has been going on for decades.

I remember the blatant PR campaign for Green Lantern with early screeners bringing in amazing tweets from people in the biz.

https://www.slashfilm.com/515948/early-buzz-screening-green-lantern-earns-positive-praise/

The first screening of Martin Campbell's Green Lantern happened on Sunday night in Hollywood, and the early response so far has been very positive. Read some tweets and quotes after the jump.

Robert Meyer Burnett (director of Free Enterprise) on Twitter: GREEN LANTERN fucking ROCKED. The 3D was AWESOME. As a lifelong DC fan, the opening ten minutes made me squeal like schoolgirl. ... Believe it. The first ten minutes will make you believe. The 3D is also outstanding. ... GREEN LANTERN was terrific fun. The fact that it works at all is a miracle, but it really does cook. The first ten minutes sold me. ... The 3D in the opening ten minutes is wonderful. But YOU MUST see it with polarized glasses. The color is great. ... It's not campy at all. The humor is earned. And Mark Strong as Sinestro was AWESOME. ... I LOVED GREEN LANTERN. Don't know why, but it kinda' felt like THE LAST STARFIGHTER. I know..."Huh?!? What?!?" ... it really did feel like an 80's movie, circa '84... Weird. ... BTW...In LexG parlance...Blake Lively...LOOK AT HER. SMOOOOOKING hot.

Natasha Eloi (Space Channel) on Twitter:  "So-Frakking-Un-Believable!!! I'm still spinning w/ delight & utter fangirl satisfaction!! #GREENLANTERN IS GO!!!" ... #GREENLANTERNCORP be sure to stay until the end of the 1st credit roll for the BIG PAYOFF!! U won't be disappointed!! .... Torn between #MarkStrong as #Sinestro & #RyanReynolds as #GreenLantern on who rocked more! Hmm? Think we have a tie. Better be a sequel;)

David A. Arnold (comedian) on Twitter: Just saw Green Lantern...GOOD SHIT!

Trey Alexander (Fandango.com) on Twitter: "Just saw Green Lantern. Interview the cast tomorrow. Blake Lively is so hot. Ryan Reynolds is perfect. Great mix of humor, action & dram

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Yes. Thank you!

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I agree. It was painfully dull. 3/10.

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For the most part it felt like a fan made movie with a really high budget. The batmobile, the size of the batcave. Too many interior shots, I think there isn't even an exterior shot of the Wayne's mansion. But, that doesn't necessarily mean it's bad, it's just how it felt.

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I think there isn't even an exterior shot of the Wayne's mansion.

There was. I think you just didn't pay attention because you already dislike it.

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Maybe I didn't pay attention because it's 3 hour movie. Also I don't dislike it, in fact I just said in my previous post it isn't bad. It's a pretty average movie, with its up and downs. I gave more details in other threads.

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It isn't bad does not mean that you like it.

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