How dare you James Gunn, you weasel POS
First you do a lazy ass reboot keeping your friends/family employed & recasting the most popular loved characters,then you make everything like guardians Slop you Hack & to top it all off you destroy the legacy of Green Lanterns
F**K YOU.
@AlwaysRight_98@HenryLouis21 >irrelevant but you’re emotionally retarded and intellectually molested so you couldn’t help being homophobic
>all subjective opinion that doesn’t refute what OP said, he still escaped a black hole while weakened and defeated a strong clone that knew multiple martial arts.
@samarthFTR@SuperSagaNews Every movie factors in every immediate source of revenue like collaborative deals, do you think DCU Studios is special and the only one to operate like a business?
@ScottMescu6250@thebigmuuj301 Did you expect me to bring up the movies passport when discussing tone and aesthetic? What do you think a feeling is?
And I did bring up objective measures of Britishness, which was the fact 90% of the movie was filmed in Liverpool, London and Glasgow.
So I substantiated my
@ScottMescu6250@thebigmuuj301 IRRC The Third man and The Long Good Friday were British films that served as inspiration but I don’t see any comparison that serves the British-ness feeling with the way they were utilised.
British noir kinda just operated by similar conventions to American noir.
Not true.
Out of context the narration is misleading but it’s a fictional ending from Ruthye’s book utilised to juxtapose her simply smacking Krem with her cane.
He even rubs his head. No execution took place.
I just learned that the ending of the tom king Supergirl comic is that they execute a reformed prisoner begging for his right to live and my jaw dropped
@thebigmuuj301 They used a lot British locations and architecture to make up the texture of the movie. The gothic rainy aesthetic. A lot of British faces filled the cast.
And in less tangible ways I could say how morbid and bitter-sweet the movie was felt British.