MovieChat Forums > Atlas Shrugged II: The Strike (2012) Discussion > I liked Part 1! Should I watch this?

I liked Part 1! Should I watch this?


I read the book back in April between my midterms and finals. After my last final I watched the first part knowing that the second one had different actors and they both received poor reviews. I actually REALLY LIKED the first one! I liked the actors/actresses; I thought they fit the roles very well. I enjoyed the dialogue and the scenery and the way they displayed the industrialists disappearing.

I'm not asking you to challenge me and say why you don't like it, I'm just asking: Should I watch the second one?

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if your standards are so low that you liked the first one, you'll probably love part 2!

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Gee I appreciate that. It wasn't low standards, I just thought it was very faithful to the big, did a clever job of updating the content to make it relevant in the modern times and I liked the cast. Excuse me for having a different opinion from yourself.

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hey if you like bad movies about bad books, more power to you. i'm saying that if you liked part 1, you'll like part 2 as it's more of the same. a bit more humor (intentional and otherwise - my personal favorite is the trash bag tumbleweeds scene), but otherwise in the same vein.

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hey if you like bad movies about bad books, more power to you.

Coming from another anonymous internet genius with plenty of time to spew denigration while his own life is surely full of productivity and accomplishment.

...and we wait with bated breath for his next pearls of wisdom.

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if one does not want to hear an honest answer, one should not ask the question in the first place.

i'd much rather spew praise, and do so frequently. watch a james westby movie if you want to see something worth watching!

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I was a little concerned about the cast change, but overall it seemed to work pretty well. No actor was so iconic that they couldn't be replaced. I felt the pacing was a little better and it was equally entertaining while, like the first film, didn;t dwell on "preaching" and when it did deliver a faithful monologue it flowed better than in the first.

The "who's John Galt" lines are still clumsy and work worse than they do in the novel. But overall, i was quite satisfied with Part II.

If you enjoyed the first one I think you'd do well with he second one as well.



"De gustibus non disputandum est"
#3

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isn't that what i said? that's two votes for "it's at least as good as part 1"

ps- love that latin phrase, but i think it's not quite right....

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De gustibus non est disputandum?

"De gustibus non disputandum est"
#3

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much better!

unless you're intentionally mangling the language, of course....

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I've seen it written both ways. I've never been good with the rules of Latin grammar as they've always seemed far too flexible- at least the little they taught me way back in high school (between the raging teenage hormones and bong hits of the 70's).



"De gustibus non est disputandum"
#3

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i've only seen it the one way, but in wikipedia we trust.

if you can handle english grammar, latin should be a piece of cake.

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IDK I thnk im looseing my hndl on eng grammer L8ly



"De gustibus non est disputandum"
#3

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sad do not be. fine your grammar is!

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That's because I use the Farce.



"De gustibus non est disputandum"
#3

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and the farce is strong with you!

but it's not because you have a high #@&*%^#$*&(*& midiclorian count!

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You should watch the second one, understanding in advance that you may be a little thrown because they recast the whole thing.

Overall, I think Part II had better acting and pacing, and more exciting sequences. The first one was awfully heavy on boardroom scenes and a lot of talky-talk about the qualities of metal. But opinions vary sharply on the cast. I thought Taylor Schilling was too young and glamorous to play Dagny, and Grant Bowler was too smooth. Jason Beghe struck me exactly right, and Samantha Mathis was believable (even though she falls far short of Cate Blanchett, my ideal choice for the role). Unfortunately, the two actors did not display any sexual chemistry in Part II whatsoever.

The big improvement was D'Anconia. How much of that was direction and how much acting, I don't know, but the first incarnation made him seem like far too much of an idiotic frivolous womanizing playboy to be believable as a highly intelligent and competent industrialist. Esai Morales did a much better job on the latter aspect, which is by far more important to the narrative--particularly in the money speech at James Taggart's wedding, and his attempt to persuade Rearden to join the strike.

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