I was so angry about all the stupid dead child stuff. Why couldn't she have just been a freaking scientist doing science in space?
Yeah, I get tired of all the pre-packaged trauma. Male characters with a dead wife, female characters with a dead husband or for max pain a dead child, kids and Batman with dead parents. It would be nice if they could be ordinary people who become heroes. That's one thing I really liked about
Ant-Man,
his motivating pain was separation from his very much alive kid.
I suppose there does need to be a reason for someone to choose a life of weird science and danger, as opposed to having to cope when they get pulled in without warning. But being an astronaut is one of those cool things that most kids think would be a great thing to do, it doesn't require inspirational trauma.
All the terrible reviews on Batman vs. Superman is making my shriveled-up walnut heart cry tears of toy. /petty
Its box office take will probably be impervious to bad reviews. But let me just sit in a happy bubble for 5 minutes, in which someone high up on the food chain finally realizes what a giant hack Zack Snyder is and takes away all his toys.
I suppose there does need to be a reason for someone to choose a life of weird science and danger, as opposed to having to cope when they get pulled in without warning.
I felt like it could easily have been that she was a fucking awesome scientist who got an amazing opportunity (that goes horribly wrong) but because the character was a woman, and because the filmmakers forgot they had to have a plot in addition to cool effects, she HAD to be a Tragic Mom. VOMIT!
Because a woman wouldn't possibly go into a challenging career unless she'd "lost" something that would keep her in lesser job that would let her be a mom.
I felt like it could easily have been that she was a fucking awesome scientist who got an amazing opportunity (that goes horribly wrong) but because the character was a woman, and because the filmmakers forgot they had to have a plot in addition to cool effects, she HAD to be a Tragic Mom. VOMIT!
That's one of the great things about The Martian -- he's just an awesome scientist who got an amazing opportunity that goes horribly wrong.
I found the backstory in
Gravity
very affecting. I can see why it would bug, but it really didn't bother me. I thought the movie was more about her deciding that she still wants to live, despite having lost her child, than it was about the technical things she had to do to survive. It wouldn't have packed the same punch, for me, without that element.
This may also explain why I liked it more than
The Martian.
Which I thought was great! But it didn't grab me on an emotional level like
Gravity
did.
Well, there's something to be said for lowered expectations. I saw BvS this afternoon, and it wasn't the utter steaming pile that the bulk of the reviews led me to believe. It does look like it was edited by a toddler with ADHD, but the underlying story mostly holds together even if motivations are opaque for a couple of characters. And I thought all the performances made the best of the mediocre writing they had to work with, excepting Jesse Eisenberg's which was just as tic-filled and nonsensical as everyone's been saying. Of particular interest to me were
the facts that Clark/Superman was not as relentlessly scowly and brooding as people said (although the movie never allowed him to speak in his own defense), and that Batman's paranoid hostility was clearly shown to be an overreaction born out of his own trauma and not the high moral ground.