Verminator
Full Member
Apparently not, judging by some comments above.
I remember gambit saying in the Batman thread that the filmmakers were combining several of the more famous storylines from the comics. Seems like what happened is they handpicked the 'big events' from those stories without then going through the grueling work and tough decisions involved in weaving them into a single story. It's no accident regarding the number of people who felt big moments like the villain reveal, the 'new bat signal', are a bit off to say the least. One definitely gets the feeling they didn't go that extra mile.
To be brutally fair it's not an easy thing to do, especially in screenwriting where not only does the usual "every decision you make affects almost everything else" still apply, but you're also burdened with limited real estate that is the 'two hour' box.
Of course on the other hand there's the "If you're going to be that ambitious, you'd better be able to deliver in spades," angle.
Can one be "brutally fair"?
Can't believe that Wibble got so much stick for having an opinion.
I think he gave it a 2, is probably influenced by the OTT adoration espoused by the fans. I agree with him and did the same when I saw Inception in the IMDB top ten.
There are many reasons not to like TDKR. Flimsy, simplistic plot, one dimensional bad guy, hours of inaction (not only set piece wise, but in plot development terms)
There seems to be a lack of reasons put forward by the pro-TDKR group.
"It's great! (but I can't give a reason why)"
Movie appreciation is subjective, and there will always be differing opinions. Who is anybody to say, who is right or wrong?
TDKR will divide opinion, in a way a true great like Jaws, The Godfather or Casablanca won't, because it did not have what it takes to satisfy "in it's own right", and in my case, even as part of the trilogy.