Shirtless Thor aside, I felt there was plenty of an emotional hook.
Compared to Capt. America it felt a little emptier, more bombast. But whatevs, I enjoyed Thor but didn't think it was as good as the first Iron Man or Captain America.
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Shirtless Thor aside, I felt there was plenty of an emotional hook.
Compared to Capt. America it felt a little emptier, more bombast. But whatevs, I enjoyed Thor but didn't think it was as good as the first Iron Man or Captain America.
Compared to Capt. America it felt a little emptier, more bombast.
Cap definitely got the bigger emotional wallop. Rightly so, I think. Just a different hero's journey. (Steve throwing himself on the fake grenade kills me every time. Damn.)
Thor is the Golden Boy, acts like a jackass, banished, sadface, learns his lesson, heads back home. Not the deepest of all emotional journeys, but it worked.
Dana Stevens from Slate didn't like it very much: [link]
But a colossally scaled blockbuster like The Avengers lacks both the agility and the motivation to question its reason for existence. Its primary purpose is not to explore or subvert the superhero movie, but to lay the groundwork for more of them
You can keep reading negative reviews (and there are a few) to dampen your enthusiasm! Although more likely, they'll just make you annoyed.
Dana Stevens from Slate didn't like it very much:
I read that, and I thought, well, if you go into it saying you've pretty much had your fill of comic book movies, then maybe this is the wrong movie for you.
I thought Thor had plenty of emotional hook. You had:
1) When will my parents start treating me like an adult angst
2) My little brother is being a brat again, because I'm a big show-off, maybe I should quit being a jerk sibling rivalry
3) The flip side, my brother is hogging the spotlight, I just want my parents to notice meeeeee angst
4) This hot chick must like me because she keeps running me over, but damn she's smart and I admire that, I must give her up for the better (back of hand thrown up over eyes) of the world
I only had a little problem with #4, that particular arc I found not as compelling as the others, but there was enough to go around with the first three
Day like this are when I feel like a very different sort of geek than y'all. Cause I saw the trailer and thought to myself "I might actually go to that one." because it looks pretty good. But I'm done now. Which makes me feel like I'm missing Christmas morning or called the Beatles a bunch of homely English guys. I'd be happy to get a movie about The Black Dahlia case that didn't completely suck, but I suppose I'd be worried about America Henry Goldblume style if that one had midnight showings and lines around the block...what would I want like that with fannish intensity... a big-screen Deadwood movie?(carefully timed to not fuck Justified flatter than hammered shit, of course, because even though Justified isn't Mommy, I've come to love her very much.)
Dana Stevens often has weird, almost idiosyncratic tastes. Something I think she would like she doesn't, and vice versa. I don't get her.
You can keep reading negative reviews (and there are a few) to dampen your enthusiasm! Although more likely, they'll just make you annoyed.
Ha, pretty much.
I liked Thor more than Captain America, and I agree that it had an emotional hook, which surprised me. Cap's was possibly stronger and clearer, though, for sure.
Also, expect to miss some of the better lines in the movie, because the entire theatre will be laughing at a quip and then a zinger comes back that the laughter just rolls right over and you miss it.
This was an issue during Cabin in the Woods. Which was hyped up AND BLEW MY MIND WITH ITS AMAZINGNESS, so good.
I loved that even during all the battle scenes, it wasn't just violence for violence sake. Every fight exposed more and more of each character and who they were. Seriously, I'm going to go back and wallow in it.
burbles
STEPH LET'S DITCH OUR LIVES AND GO SEE IT RIGHT NOW.
sometimes, I think they do it to get attention. Bloggers? No way!
(back of hand thrown up over eyes
Drama llama, demigod edition?