Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Mickey wrote:

Been awhile since I posted a film review here.

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)

Just awesome. The sweeping scale, the special effects, the hilarious acting is all tied together by an epic story. I love an action movie that is willing to take risks, and make jokes from time to time. The comedic timing is always on par, and Depp stole the show. This movie is pure awesomeness, and I'll definitely be watching the rest of the movies, despite everyone saying that the first is far superior, and that the others don't come close.

The ultimate pirate movie.

9.5/10

It was quite a daring task to make a film based on a ride.  But as you said, it was a great film and Depp really shined in it for me as well.  As for the sequels, well, they were made mostly because the first was such a box office hit.  However, they still provide a decent adventure film, not as good as the first. 
My main problem with the films is that they left me confused.  Sure, I was young when I saw them, but they seem so complicated.  I don't know; might have to watch them again.

Have a nice day! mini/smile

YouTube

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Predator

Remember when action movies could be both fun and intense? These days action movies either take themselves way too seriously, or are all 'nudge-nudge-wink-wink' affairs that completely miss the point.

Yeah, Arnold Schwarzenegger action-films are perhaps my biggest guilty pleasure. I pretend to be all into artsy, black & white foreign language films when nothing makes me more happier than a hunky Austrian with a big gun. (Yeah...um...that came out wrong...) He may not be Sir Ian McKellan, but Total Recall? Commando? The Terminator? Conan The Barbarian? True Lies? This movie? All excellent escapist entertainment. I can certainly name more good Schwarzenegger films then I can McKellan films. (Gods And Monsters, Richard III, Lord of the Rings...um...oh and Apt Pupil was alright I guess)

What also surprised me was how well the visual effects have aged. The Predator's cloaking effect looks great, the gore is shocking, and the big action scene at the start is a step-by-step guide on how to shoot/choregraph/edit a big shootout. The Expendables already looks about ten years old.

The Truman Show

Never seen this before. Never been a Jim Carrey fan despite really liking his performance in Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind. In fact, I checked this out because I'd heard it was Carrey in one of his more dramatic roles.

Its always great when I go into a movie with hardly any expectations and get blown away. This is absolutely incredible, and might have shot into my favourites list. I love it when a film has an inspired concept and then explores almost every single possibility that concept presents (see Groundhog Day and Being John Malkovich

I had a good afternoon today...

YouTube
Max, She/Her

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Guardians of the Galaxy

I must REALLY be in the minority on this one, but, I actually hated this film.

Ok, well, maybe hate is a bit too strong of a word, as I did like a few elements that the film presented. However, overall, it was just a downer for me - nothing really good or special, and, it didn't have much of a "re-watchability" quality that I like to see in films. Sure, it was, um, ok for a stand-alone film, but, I really don't care to watch it again, and, will definitely not see any sequels that Marvel and Disney will most likely dish out in the future...

Right from the start, the film struck the wrong chord with me.

Spoiler (click to read)

The mother dies in the first 10 minutes.

I mean, really, if you're going to kill off a character, and want us to care, then don't do it in the first 10 minutes. (Unless you can back it up like in "Citizen Kane," or have sufficient backstory such as in "Up") I'm not stoic or heartless, but, come on - I really didn't care about that death, and, I'd bet that, neither did anybody else watching it.

Just to think, if you arrived 10 minutes late, you'd have missed that whole part, and, it wouldn't have caused any confusion until right before the credits! That's such a movie no-no, and, to see it be done by Disney, or even Marvel for that matter, is just a disgrace to film and storytelling itself!

Another thing that got a bit on my nerves was the obscenity of it all. Now, don't get me wrong - I'm not one of those "you can't ever curse" people - Some of my all time favorite films have all been R rated. (Godfather, Matrix) However, middle fingers, sexual references, and unnecessary swearing, in a Disney film, of all things, did pull me out of the story a few times. (And that's another Hollywood no-no. If the audience is pulled out, you've ruined the experience and, will most likely have a hard time bringing them back.)

This isn't to say that all of the obscenity should have been edited out...

Spoiler (click to read)

The part where our main character is taken to prison is actually pretty funny.

But, when the talking racoon starts dropping words that make even the toughest sailors run for the hills, it's not only in bad taste, but it's just plain stupid!

Another thing that really annoyed me was the main villain. He didn't strike me as very scary, and, really didn't seem all that powerful. Isn't a hero only as good as their villain? - Well, this one was pretty poor, and that did rub off on the heroes a bit... But, thankfully, it didn't hurt the plot as much as it could have.

I really only have three elements that stood out as positive for me, and, with one of them being the Stan Lee cameo, that's an all-time low for a Superhero movie.

One of the things I really liked was, funny enough, just after the opening.

Spoiler (click to read)

Our main character is on some strange planet and, instead of fearing this dark cave full of hostile creatures, he turns up the headset and starts jamming out while fighting his way through the place.

That was one of those moments - one that can make or break a film, as, it rides on a bit of the nostalgia factor. If you depict such a moment in the wrong way, it ruins the scene, but, if it's done right - just like how you used to jam out to your favorite band while jumping up and down on your bed in just your shorts and socks - then, it can redeem itself. We've all turned up the tunes, and have "done" things to the music. (Whether it be stirring your soup to the beat of a song, or lip-synching to the song while doing chores, we've all played around like this in our own way)

It's great because it really connects you with the main characters, while also humanizing him at the same time.

The other thing that this film was good at was it's effects. Most of the time, the CGI is disguised by fog, and/or it's in space, so, I just tend to be more forgiving there. It made the action sequences worthwhile, and, gave the movie a better pace. I wasn't disappointed there.

However, overall, it just didn't speak to me. It's REALLY not deserving as one of the top grossing films this year, and, overall, didn't excite me as much as, something like Superman Returns did back in the day. And, if you can't even top Superman Returns, you don't really have business making superhero films.

I went in not expecting much, and, though it has interested me to look back at some more of my comics again, it isn't inspiring me to see any more films from the Marvel/Disney combo. It's just like Pirates of the Caribbean vs the Lone Ranger film. They're both doing basically the same things, but, only one is really "classic," while the other is pretty poor and gets what it gave - not much.

https://i.imgur.com/Z8VtGae.png

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Dyland wrote:

Guardians of the Galaxy

I really didn't care about that death, and, I'd bet that, neither did anybody else watching it.

My eyes got a bit watery at that bit.

I do kinda agree with you about some of the humor and language though.  Something about it didn't feel like it fit with the style of the film to me.
I still thought it was great, though.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

I mostly agree with you Dyland.  I thought that it had the usual poorly written dialogue I have come to expect from Marvel movies and was just too busy.  I was hoping for so much more.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Space Chimps 1 and 2

I will bash each accordingly:

#1

Before I watched this, all I had heard about it was the "Crazy Frog" song. Sadly, that was, by far, the high point of the film. The voice acting sounded like it had been done by amateurs, it was really bad, if only they had contacted some BiM users, it would have been much better. The cruddy voice acting was also made worse by that cruddy dialogue and terribly animated mouth movement. Everything about it was predictable, and the characters just felt bland to me. Houston was named that solely so that they could have the crummy "Houston, we have a problem" joke. Ham, just seemed like a big egotistical jerk, and I expected him to have the cliche "change of heart" thing near the end of the film, but it never happened. Luna is the most sexist character I've ever seen in an animated film, and she was complimented by a terrible voice actor and predictable feminine dialogue. I'm pretty sure that they added Comet (these names tho!) into this film just in case someone actually liked annoying teenagers who know too much about technology. The rest of the characters seemed to be introduced in a rush, and many of them (kilowatt) were just there because cuteness required it. There were also numerous plot holes and overly convenient things. I hate to nitpick like this, but some of these were just so blatantly obvious. For instance,

Spoiler (click to read)

Why the heck would NASA give a satellite, something that was never meant to land, the ability to transform into a planet enslaving matrix-bot? Also, if the monkeys were never controlling the spaceship in the first place (this theory is confirmed when they open the flap to reveal the bells and whistles) why bother to train 3 monkeys in the first place?

Zartok was, by far, the best character in the movie. Even though his voice sounded a bit choked, I think he was the most interesting character of all of them, and that's not saying much either. Overall, I will not be watching this film again, however, I did learn one great thing from it, all I have to do to win over a babe is to be a jerkface.

#2

When I saw that there was a second Space Chimps, I was shocked. But I figured I would watch it anyway and hope that it was better than the first one. It wasn't, it was worse. Remember that annoying young Anakin Skywalker character that we all hated name Comet? Well the entire plot is focused on his bland, poorly voice acted, life. And to make matters worse,

Spoiler (click to read)

he is now in love with that annoying, tries to be cute but isn't, pointless, and annoying character that we all hated last time named Kilowatt

Yeah, it would be as bad as if Jar-Jar Binks was in love with and Ewok. Also to make matters worse, they tried to make the sexist character, Luna, seem smart and cool this time, but they just made her more of a sexist character. And yes, Ham is more of a d**ch*b*g than he was in the first one. This one wouldn't have been as vomit inducing as the first, but these somehow managed to take the cruddy dialogue from the first film, and make it worse, with worse voice acting. There were also tons of pointless "falling in love" scenes between

Spoiler (click to read)

Comet and Kilowatt

. It seemed like they wanted to show all of the characters from the first movie, with all of their bad traits made worse, and they did a darn good job too. There were as many, if not more, plot holes in this film than the first, but let me point just one out to you.

Spoiler (click to read)

When that annoying Comet guy does some really cliche stuff and lifts the rocket off by accident, (wooooo, huge surprise) it shows the events that take place in the next 5 minutes. Some of these events include passing Jupiter, Saturn, several other planets, and Pluto. As of yet, we haven't made a ship that can pass those planets in less than 8 to 10 months, and these probes used the Earths gravitational pull to enhance their speed. So, unless they invented a spacecraft that can travel about 5 times the speed of light, this couldn't have happened.

I could rant on about the plot (or lack thereof), and about overly cliche events, but I think you have the picture.

I would give both of these films a 3/10 rating, don't watch them, they are monkey....poop....

The guy who got banned more times than DiCaprio said "f***" in The Wolf Of Wall Street.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Dyland wrote:

Guardians of the Galaxy
Another thing that really annoyed me was the main villain. He didn't strike me as very scary, and, really didn't seem all that powerful. Isn't a hero only as good as their villain?

Out of curiosity, if the ability to literally destroy all life on a planet by poking it with a stick isn't powerful, then what is?

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

That's such a movie no-no, and, to see it be done by Disney, or even Marvel for that matter, is just a disgrace to film and storytelling itself!

*cough*

Spoiler (click to read)

First few minutes of The Amazing Spider-Man 2

*cough*

Another thing that got a bit on my nerves was the obscenity of it all.

Oh darn, swearing in a PG-13 movie? You're right, that is uncalled for! You poor thing, having the free agency to walk into a PG-13 movie, and the naughty movie annoying you with their PG-13 swearing!

Have you seen a big-chinned boy?

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

So I don't watch super hero movies so I haven't seen GotG but...

But, when the talking racoon starts dropping words that make even the toughest sailors run for the hills, it's not only in bad taste, but it's just plain stupid!

How can that happen in a PG-13 movie? Make sailors run? (Maybe they was literal, as I said I haven't seen in) I think you should watch In The Loop and maybe evaluate what strong language actually is. (And you probably should never hang out with me or anyone who lives in a major city )

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

SlothPaladin wrote:

But, when the talking racoon starts dropping words that make even the toughest sailors run for the hills, it's not only in bad taste, but it's just plain stupid!

How can that happen in a PG-13 movie?

I think Dyland should either go back to watching G-rated films with his zippy cup or not let a majority shareholding company like Disney dictate his expectations of a film.

FYI, Disney may own the property (Marvel, Star Wars, etc.) but they've chosen to not get involved in those studio's production.  It has proven beneficial that way.

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Re: What was the last movie you watched?

But, when the talking racoon starts dropping words that make even the toughest sailors run for the hills, it's not only in bad taste, but it's just plain stupid!

I haven't seen the film, but I am sure that the language isn't that bad. I don't think the average audience member speaks sailor, and any sailors swears will go straight over the heads of the Motion Picture Association of America. I guess the worse they could put in the film would be the F-bomb, which I would agree doesn't belong in a PG-13 movie. That's kind of contradictory to the rating systems purpose. Of course, if they made it R, not as many people would pay to see it...

And I pretty am sure most  13 year olds have learned all the words there are to learn after a couple online multiplayer rounds of Call Of Duty. mini/lol

no more brickfilming *sad face*.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

backyardlegos wrote:

Out of curiosity, if the ability to literally destroy all life on a planet by poking it with a stick isn't powerful, then what is?

Sure, the weapon that the villain obtains is powerful, but, the man possessing it wasn't. It's like if I watched a film where Brutus was cast by a wimpy looking guy - it would sort of ruin the whole Roman murder, wouldn't it? It's like if, in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, the villain was just some animator, pulling the Bugs Bunny in Duck Amuck gag - it'd ruin the whole thing. Sure, you can make someone powerful by handing them a powerfully written macguffin - but, they need to prove that they can really use it before I'm convinced that I should be scared of them. If one could simply steal such a device off of the main villain while he's sleeping, there's not much of a challenge. I'd sneak into this villain's house and steal things, with no worries. The house of a an intellectual villain, or an already otherworldly powerful villain - no.

Mickey wrote:

Oh darn, swearing in a PG-13 movie? You're right, that is uncalled for! You poor thing, having the free agency to walk into a PG-13 movie, and the naughty movie annoying you with their PG-13 swearing!

Must I restate:

Now, don't get me wrong - I'm not one of those "you can't ever curse" people - Some of my all time favorite films have all been R rated. (Godfather, Matrix) However, middle fingers, sexual references, and unnecessary swearing, in a Disney film, of all things, did pull me out of the story a few times.

I have absolutely no problems with swearing in films (I'd be fine with coarse language in a G rated film, so long as it's used tastefully) however, it's when it pulls me out of the film when things go south. In the Godfather - I accept it. In the Matrix, it's ok because they're

SlothPaladin wrote:

in a major city

!

For starters, I hate talking animals in movies... perhaps that's making my opinion a bit more biased. Nevertheless, I don't think that talking animals should be cursing in a Disney-produced film. The Disney owned Touchstone pictures can make R rated features all the do-da day! and I won't care. It's just that when a film ads obscenity into a film just to boost the MPAA rating to "attract" a smaller, but, statistically more theater-going audience, it really gets on my nerves.

Sure, I could start making brickfilms every day, ones with no original content, all of which less than 30 seconds, and all featuring IP's just for views - but I won't. I still believe that creators like Smeagol, Nathan Wells, and Doug Vandegrift can, and should make films for the fun of it - and for the art in it. I'd like to thing that there's still a meaning that can be brought across, one that can still be preached, one that can be shown to EVERYONE!!!

In the words of Walt Disney:

You're dead if you aim only for kids. Adults are only kids grown up, anyway.

I'm sick of seeing PG-13's that should have been PG, R's that could have been PG, and G's that were boosted up just to avoid being seen as "kids films." The classic masters didn't care about ratings, and neither did the generations after them. Why is it that now it's a big deal? Wasn't "Frozen" (which I've yet to see, BTW) the highest grossing film of 2013? And, didn't the LEGO Movie attempt to appeal to kids, teens, and AFOL's alike? - Heck, that's why I brickfilm. Because I know that there's always someone ready to be entertained.

When a film fails to entertain, yet gets tremendously huge, it's a little disheartening, you know? It makes me wonder if the filmmakers even tried? Or, did the studio just hand out these "fool-proof" projects to just about anybody - all just to make a quick buck? I never once thought that during The LEGO Movie, or when watching Atlantis The Lost Empire, or while viewing Casablanca for the first time back on VHS. It's because, for those movies, the film makers cared. Sure, the big business leaders were in it for the money, but, the film makers weren't... the artists weren't... the dreamers weren't.

For me, Guardians of the Galaxy wasn't up to par with my standards. But, it must have been for someone... a lot of someones... Either way, I still 'hate' it. - Though, I can see the little bits of art and inspiration that did show through a few times. Too bad it just wasn't enough to make me like the thing as a whole.

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Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Be sure to keep things civil here guys.
It's been tolerable so far, but this kind of thing tends to get out of hand pretty quick.

Yeah, I too noticed more language throughout than most of the other Marvel films, but that doesn't mean they didn't have their own problems. (In fact, IIRC, Iron Man 3 had two muffled F- Words, which is yet another reason I hate that thing.)

Still, while this one did push the envelope compared to the others, there are worse PG-13 ratings out there. So for its rating, it's fine. Compared to the other Marvel films that where marketed as "Whole family can enjoy action movies" it did go a bit further than normal, and further than I prefer. BUT, that was evident from the trailers, and it's either endure that, or don't watch, or get a TV guardian.

I agree that Lee Pace's villain was threatening, but without feeling all that threatening, similar almost to Malekith from Thor 2.
Marvel's main fault seems to be villains. Over-using the good one, and under developing all the others. It's almost like Marvel is slowly falling into a similar story format that works, but will soon fall apart as viewers realize that it's all just the same thing in a new wrapping.

That being said, do we have a dedicated Marvel thread to discuss all of this elsewhere and not use this thread for an unintended purpose? Not saying we need one, but it may be a good idea.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Hey, did you know that Pulp Fiction is technically owned by Disney?

backyardlegos wrote:
Dyland wrote:

Another thing that really annoyed me was the main villain. He didn't strike me as very scary, and, really didn't seem all that powerful. Isn't a hero only as good as their villain?

Out of curiosity, if the ability to literally destroy all life on a planet by poking it with a stick isn't powerful, then what is?

Having lots of power doesn't make one powerful. Obama controls the largest nuclear arsenal in the world, yet does he strike you with fear?

SlothPaladin wrote:

I think you should watch In The Loop and maybe evaluate what strong language actually is. (And you probably should never hang out with me or anyone who lives in a major city

Even better, watch the original TV show In The Loop is based on (The Thick of It) The language is balletically filthy. It's a perfect example of swearing being an artform. Haven't seen GotG - and don't want to because I'll probably hate it and then everyone will get mad at me - but by the sounds of it, GotG sounds like when people write a clean script and then inject swearing into it.

YouTube
Max, She/Her

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Max Butcher wrote:
SlothPaladin wrote:

I think you should watch In The Loop and maybe evaluate what strong language actually is. (And you probably should never hang out with me or anyone who lives in a major city

Even better, watch the original TV show In The Loop is based on (The Thick of It) The language is balletically filthy. It's a perfect example of swearing being an artform.

I'm all for that. Makes a great break from the traditional usage of such words that drives me crazy. If only more serious films could use swearing in a way that doesn't make them stand out from the rest of the writing and dialogue!

Max Butcher wrote:

Haven't seen GotG - and don't want to because I'll probably hate it and then everyone will get mad at me - but by the sounds of it, GotG sounds like when people write a clean script and then inject swearing into it.

Exactly! If the writers have the characters, um, break character within the first hour, (or in the movie at all, for that matter) then they're not taking themselves seriously enough. And if a film that does this becomes one of the biggest films of the year - it's a bigger slap in the face to those still trying to make movies for everyone - movies that'll reach a wider audience because they actually want everyone to hear the story, experience the characters, and enjoy the ride.

https://i.imgur.com/Z8VtGae.png

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

To be honest, Guardians Of The Galaxy was probably one of the more better films in the past few years. But maybe I'm saying this because I'm a Marvel fan? No.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

Dyland wrote:
Max Butcher wrote:

Haven't seen GotG - and don't want to because I'll probably hate it and then everyone will get mad at me - but by the sounds of it, GotG sounds like when people write a clean script and then inject swearing into it.

Exactly! If the writers have the characters, um, break character within the first hour, (or in the movie at all, for that matter) then they're not taking themselves seriously enough. And if a film that does this becomes one of the biggest films of the year - it's a bigger slap in the face to those still trying to make movies for everyone - movies that'll reach a wider audience because they actually want everyone to hear the story, experience the characters, and enjoy the ride.

I think GotG is marvellous (pun intended), and I welcome the swearing in it. It doesn't feel forced or unnecessary considering the characters' motivations and personalities, and where some movies rely on obscenities to add humour, GotG uses bad language to enhance a lot of jokes that are already there. To be honest, if the script had been 'cleaner', then Quill and Rocket in particular wouldn't have been as fleshed-out or as interesting. They're not typical Marvel heroes, or tbh typical heroes in general (except Gamora, who's a bit 2D).

Maybe it's just me, but I find it very hard to fault GotG (though it does have a few flaws), and I wouldn't count its use of bad language as being at all detrimental.

Dyland wrote:

And, if you can't even top Superman Returns, you don't really have business making superhero films.

Honestly, in my opinion Superman Returns is a really lousy film overall. It's badly paced - slow at best - and lacks any kind of emotional bridge between the audience and the almost entirely undeveloped characters. Its main issue was that it's barely a film in its own right, more a love letter to the Richard Donner movies. The whole film felt like a poorly-constructed fanfilm - afraid of finding its own style, or adapting to the demands of a 21st century audience, or presenting a new spin of characters that people are already very familiar with.

Kevin Spacey was a great Lex Luthor, and those couple of shots where the bullet bounces off Superman's eye were good, but those are the films only redeeming features. Well, maybe that and the fact we see Superman saving people (the lack of which is one of my only complaints about the vastly superior Man of Steel).

I'm not trying to force my views on anyone, but for me Superman Returns was a massive disappointment, and I wasn't even as into comic books when it came out as I am now. It didn't feel exciting, even though it had some impressive set pieces; more like an epilogue to a film series that had ended 20 years before.

A true masterpiece of superhero cinema would be The Dark Knight, as would Spider-man 2 (the Sam Raimi one, though I did enjoy the 2014 remake).

http://www.brickshelf.com/gallery/ZoefDeHaas/stuff/sig1.png
"Nothing goes down 'less I'm involved. No nuggets. No onion rings. No nothin'. A cheeseburger gets sold in the park, I want in! You got fat while we starved on the streets...now it's my turn!" -Harley Morenstein

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

I loved superman returns. The swearing wasn't that bad in GOTG. Were you guys homeschooled, because nowadays, 95% of people in schools swear. I first heard the "f" word in grade two. It was mostly Peter Quill who swore anyways. I'm getting sick of people complaining about the language. The mpaa ratings aren't there for nothing.

Skyfall
I finally watched it. Not much of a James Bond fan, but I definitely liked this.

Re: What was the last movie you watched?

jampot wrote:

Maybe it's just me, but I find it very hard to fault GotG (though it does have a few flaws), and I wouldn't count its use of bad language as being at all detrimental.

I can see we have differing opinions, Jampot - but, I'd just like to make a few things clear:

Sure, swearing can add to characters. Look at Back to the Future - those movies are filled with curses, but, I never really noticed them. They didn't "stand out" or distract from the overall story because they made sense for each character and didn't hinder the dialogue - if anything, it helped it move forward.

Spoiler (click to read)

I especially love Doc Brown's three uses of the 'D' word, as Marty's running late. It gives the scene a really good pace, and, doesn't distract from the overall emotions and motivations of the story and characters at this point.

In GotG however, most of the swearing, coming from foreign aliens, really just stood out as rubbish writing. Again,

Spoiler (click to read)

the main character flipping the guards when at the prison

worked because it just seemed in character for him - a kid from the 80's who never got any of "the talks" from his parents, and still swears and curses around others as he would alone. But, the other characters? - No, it just made the whole thing a bit more corny, and, became really distracting when the rest of the viewing audience seemed to just be laughing at the swears instead of the actual jokes hidden beneath. - It just took me out of the story and hindered my ability to keep with the story in an engaged way. The whole time I practically started looking around at all of the people laughing at really stupid things. - I want more out of a movie, and, I guess that just sets me apart from the average viewing audience of a Disney produced PG-13 superhero flick.

jampot wrote:
Dyland wrote:

And, if you can't even top Superman Returns, you don't really have business making superhero films.

Honestly, in my opinion Superman Returns is a really lousy film overall.

That was the joke (I'm sorry if I didn't make that very clear to any of you). I wasn't gonna compare GotG to Avatar, Indiana Jones and the KotCS or Batman & Robin because of all of the controversies surrounding those movies. I chose to relate it to Superman Returns because they are similar in my opinion. (Not very strong, but, still both have good moments sprinkled in throughout) Superman Returns was a bit of a bummer, and, so was GotG for me... so much so that I actually liked the drama of SR a bit more than the obviously unrealistic and vulgar scenes of GotG. - And I usually hate dramas. mini/tongue

funmiproductions wrote:

Were you guys homeschooled?

Hey, let's not start promoting stereotypes or start calling people names... that's what the other brickfilm communities are for mini/tongue - Seriously, though. Let's keep that out of the BiM forums! mini/no

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Re: What was the last movie you watched?

I think the homeschooling question is fair. It's hard to notice or be shaken by (frankly rather minimal), casual coarse language like that in Guardians of the Galaxy unless you come from a sheltered upbringing. This issue comes up on this site, unlike most filmmaking sites, because of how many conservative young people we have.

For what it's worth, I generally avoid casual use of profanity in my scripts unless it's very essential to a character, and I certainly don't think swearing is a good thing to do in one's own day-to-day life. This is mostly because of how it makes you look, though. I don't have a moral/ethical problem with a movie that has movie characters cursing in films, just as I would not have a moral problem with a movie that has a movie character doing other things I don't generally approve of, such as murder. If you're glorifying it, or marketing it to young children who don't have as great an ability to discern, that can be a different matter, of course. I don't think that's really the intention with GotG, which is rated PG-13, and the characterization of Rocket and others probably would lose a lot of its edge if these murderous criminals were polite enough to avoid coarse language.

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