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Hi-Q wrote:Rolling Thunder wrote:Darth Bombshell wrote:This is where reading into the big picture becomes necessary. Both "Ghosts of Yesterday" and the movie prequel do more than a good job of establishing the Decepticons, and it's not hard to see that there's a loose trilogy of sorts between them, where reading one is necessary for understanding the other two.
It's sort of like how the Star Wars Expanded Universe is treated by Star Wars fans. The people who claim the movies should go deeper into things like character development and explanations don't seem to realize that's what the books are for.
Ok, except you got movies like Spider-man that succeed in explaining everything within the movie, no comic books/videogames needed.
I shouldn't have to buy a comic book or videogame to understand a movie. If done right, the movie should be able to stand solid on its own, and all the comic and videogame tie ins should do nothing more than add to the experience if the person in question is wanting more after seeing the movie.
So have to totally disagree with you on that point, sorry.
Um, when was the last comic book movie that had TWELVE superheros/villians?
Not even close to a fair comparison.
Darth Bombshell wrote:Rolling Thunder wrote:I shouldn't have to buy a comic book or videogame to understand a movie. If done right, the movie should be able to stand solid on its own, and all the comic and videogame tie ins should do nothing more than add to the experience if the person in question is wanting more after seeing the movie.
No one's "making" you do anything. You don't "have" to buy a novel or a comic to understand the story. I doubt that pleasing the most hardcore of fans (or those who had automatically decided to hate the movie just because Michael Bay's name was attached to it) was on the minds of Chris Ryall, Alan Dean Foster and Simon Furman when they crafted the prequel tales. They wanted to create the backdrop upon which the movie events would be based, so they did. People who wanted to look for it could. Those who didn't...well, they didn't have to. You don't exactly criticize the opening twenty minutes of "Revenge of the Sith" just because it's coming off of a combination novel/cartoon that set it up, do you? (Putting aside for a moment the fact that both mediums, which presenting the same info, diverge very widely in how they tell it.)
decepticonjon wrote:i dunno.. with all the synergy this movie had: the prequel novel, video game, prequel comics, all telling different parts to the main story of the movie, it's hard to think that some could be combined to make a better story altogether.
didn't the matrix reloaded suffer from story holes that were filled in by the video game?
Darth Bombshell wrote:This is where reading into the big picture becomes necessary. Both "Ghosts of Yesterday" and the movie prequel do more than a good job of establishing the Decepticons, and it's not hard to see that there's a loose trilogy of sorts between them, where reading one is necessary for understanding the other two.
It's sort of like how the Star Wars Expanded Universe is treated by Star Wars fans. The people who claim the movies should go deeper into things like character development and explanations don't seem to realize that's what the books are for.
Darth Bombshell wrote:This is where reading into the big picture becomes necessary. Both "Ghosts of Yesterday" and the movie prequel do more than a good job of establishing the Decepticons, and it's not hard to see that there's a loose trilogy of sorts between them, where reading one is necessary for understanding the other two.
It's sort of like how the Star Wars Expanded Universe is treated by Star Wars fans. The people who claim the movies should go deeper into things like character development and explanations don't seem to realize that's what the books are for.
Riotflea wrote:The Decepticons lost an opportunity to quickly and easily build character thanks to a decision made by either Bay or Murphy (or both?) early on... that "alien robots from space don't need ships". (Which is an insanely STUPID statement in itself, but...)
How could they build character among the bad guys if their attacks are initially pretty much just one-on-one suprise attacks?
How can there be character developement through interaction with their comrades if there's no home base they mmet up at?
How can you get to know a character as it's jumping around atop a building behind some other character? The best you can hope for in that situation is simple commands or quick personal remarks, as let's face it, they're in the middle of a military operation.
Rolling Thunder wrote:My impression was that you felt that we couldn't really complain as the material was cover in a different media and I'm saying that a lame decission by Bay, Hasbro, whoever as they could've managed their time and edited better.
roy_flagg00 wrote:I am not a "G1 fiend".
I have to say from a completely objective perspective that I don't know anything more about the decepticons after seeing this movie. All I know is that starscream failed megatron again and that the decepticons talk funny. I was wondering if anyone else was disapointed with the lack of decepticon character development?
YouFearGalvatron wrote:roy_flagg00 wrote:I am not a "G1 fiend".
I have to say from a completely objective perspective that I don't know anything more about the decepticons after seeing this movie. All I know is that starscream failed megatron again and that the decepticons talk funny. I was wondering if anyone else was disapointed with the lack of decepticon character development?
I could not agree more.
Also, did I miss something, or did Decepticons once have a faction symbol to show their allegiance proudly?
I never saw one.
Mykltron wrote:Surely it's not THAT hard to train monkeys... Is it? Maybe the monkeys were trained by monkeys who hadn't been trained properly.
G1Blaster wrote:Saying an album is ten times better than St. Anger is like saying you'd rather be hit in the head with a bat instead of kicked in the nuts.
YouFearGalvatron wrote:roy_flagg00 wrote:I am not a "G1 fiend".
I have to say from a completely objective perspective that I don't know anything more about the decepticons after seeing this movie. All I know is that starscream failed megatron again and that the decepticons talk funny. I was wondering if anyone else was disapointed with the lack of decepticon character development?
I could not agree more.
Also, did I miss something, or did Decepticons once have a faction symbol to show their allegiance proudly?
I never saw one.
roy_flagg00 wrote:YouFearGalvatron wrote:roy_flagg00 wrote:I am not a "G1 fiend".
I have to say from a completely objective perspective that I don't know anything more about the decepticons after seeing this movie. All I know is that starscream failed megatron again and that the decepticons talk funny. I was wondering if anyone else was disapointed with the lack of decepticon character development?
I could not agree more.
Also, did I miss something, or did Decepticons once have a faction symbol to show their allegiance proudly?
I never saw one.
like Bay said, " the original cartoon was just a stupid toy advertisment."
The more I think about that quote the more I understand why this movie ended up the way it did.
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