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  3. Bad film with amazing premise and mediocre execution that you can't stop thinking about?

Bad film with amazing premise and mediocre execution that you can't stop thinking about?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Asklemmy
asklemmy
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  • tetris11@lemmy.mlT [email protected]

    The sequels really explored the idea with impressive worldbuilding. I admit the first one was more a horror flick, but the others were definitely digging deep into social commentary

    pjwestin@lemmy.worldP This user is from outside of this forum
    pjwestin@lemmy.worldP This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote last edited by
    #213

    Yeah, it wasn't even that the first one was bad, it's just that all the things they mentioned in passing, like the New Founding Fathers and the exemptions for Level 10 Government Officials, were building a world that sounded super interesting. Then we got saddle with some boring rich family for 90 minutes. I only got around to seeing the first sequel, but it delivered on all the stuff I wanted to see after I heard that first announcement.

    tetris11@lemmy.mlT 1 Reply Last reply
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    • V [email protected]

      You were the one using AI, goober. Stop.

      C This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote last edited by
      #214

      Maybe you should actually read my comments in this thread before jumping on the reply button to give your hot takes about things that aren't even happening.

      V 1 Reply Last reply
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      • C [email protected]

        Maybe you should actually read my comments in this thread before jumping on the reply button to give your hot takes about things that aren't even happening.

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        wrote last edited by
        #215

        I did read your comments. I lost any and all respect I could have ever possibly had for you when you used AI to formulate a comment.

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        • B [email protected]

          Jurassic World. Just give me 90 minutes of dino mutants fighting, I don't give a shit about Chris Pratt nor some random kids.

          tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
          tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote last edited by
          #216

          +1 for I do not give a shit about Chris Pratt

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          • pjwestin@lemmy.worldP [email protected]

            Yeah, it wasn't even that the first one was bad, it's just that all the things they mentioned in passing, like the New Founding Fathers and the exemptions for Level 10 Government Officials, were building a world that sounded super interesting. Then we got saddle with some boring rich family for 90 minutes. I only got around to seeing the first sequel, but it delivered on all the stuff I wanted to see after I heard that first announcement.

            tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
            tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #217

            NostalgiaCritic did a pretty decent analysis on the Purge series a few years ago, and it touches on a lot of this:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qiiVNiWqwA

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            • S [email protected]

              Lucy

              It’s entertaining as all hell. It doesn’t pretend to be anything more, so I don’t understand the hate it gets. Just turn off your brain, and have some fun. It’s not supposed to be hard sci-fi.

              tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote last edited by
              #218

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_(2014_film)

              The audience for Lucy was split evenly between men and women, with 65 percent being over age 25.[54] Nikki Rocco, president for domestic distribution at Universal Studios, said, "To have a female lead in an original property absolutely made a difference. Scarlett is a star, and her presence [in the film] made it a lot more appealing for women."[55] Michael Bodey of The Australian commented that women having comprised half the audience is "a seemingly new precedent for an action film" and that, because of its box office performance, Lucy is the film out of all of Besson's film work "likely to have the greatest cultural impact."[18]

              It seems like it definitely resonated with a lot of people, will check it out. Luc Besson can be hit and miss, but his films are always memorable

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              • B [email protected]

                100% agree. It's a fine twist on the subgenre, but the twist introduces an idea that begs to be expanded upon as part of a larger, cross-subgenre arc. And yet we only get a sliver and then it's done.

                My hot take is that Joss Whedon's writing is like JJ Abrams': perfect premises with bad sense of follow-thru, so all their work gets the Netflix "over before it's satisfyingly concluded" treatment

                tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
                tetris11@lemmy.mlT This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote last edited by
                #219

                I feel like everything was explained. I'm not left with any lingering questions about why or how any of it happened

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                • 2ugly2live@lemmy.world2 [email protected]

                  CATS

                  Cats is not a complicated musical. All they had to do was animate it and get actual voice actors/singers. I've seen sketches for what I think was a Tim Burton sketch, and that would have been a million times better. I don't know who looked at Cat's and was like, "Yup, we need CGI." It looks horrendous and sounds bad more often than not. The musical is already pretty out there, how much more fun would that movie had been if we had animators working on it. The creative visuals, colors, motifs. Not to mention a cat is a wonderfully complex animal to animate just because of how they move. That movie could have been a visual delight in part with the Spiderman movies if they let it, but noooooo. Let's make a nightmare.

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                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                  #220

                  I still feel obliged to post it, so that the memories don't fade.

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                  • J [email protected]

                    As I recall, hyperspace is like a pocket dimension. They just speed up a whole lot to enter hyperspace. So you can't collide with things 'in hyperspace', but only as you're going really fast while transitioning to hyperspace, which is quite a bit more limited in capability.

                    Hyperspace drives are expensive, and droids are sentient (so its still suicidal). Using it as a weapon would be like having an shotgun in an fps game, where the first 5 feet is extremely lethal to really big targets, whereas anything after that is a waste of time. Also each shot is $10k.

                    The real question would be why didn't she just splat against the cruiser's shields as they established that was a problem in the previous movie (when they need to hyperspace through the shielding of that planet), unless they had a Galaxy Quest moment where they forgot to flip the shields on.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #221

                    I guess I am thinking of droids as not having free will even if they are sentient.

                    I don't find the expense of a hyperdrive to be a valid point though mostly because even if they are expensive they can't be that expensive. Han Solo has one and he never seemed like a character with money. I.e. an individual likely wouldn't be able to try this but an army, with unquestioning soldiers and an immoral general would absolutely try it imo. 1 life/ship lost to kill a fleet is a worthwhile trade

                    J 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • Z [email protected]

                      Dark City (1998) could definitely fit the bill, it has so many unique ideas for that time in film and you can see there’s of all sorts of future sci-fi movies in it from the matrix to inception, it’s a very visually ugly movie and the acting is subpar but as a premise it’s super interesting. Generally I think remakes are a waste of time and money but I’d love to see this movie with a proper budget and modern technology

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #222


                      Just joking. I really liked the movie for its style and the frightening bad guys in all sizes. Also Kiefer Sutherland with a mad scientist touch.

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                      • tetris11@lemmy.mlT [email protected]
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                        wrote last edited by [email protected]
                        #223

                        The ideas behind They Live are fascinating and deserved better treatment than a 20-minute alley fight about sunglasses.

                        G 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • A [email protected]

                          Hot take.

                          I loved cabin in the woods!

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                          wrote last edited by
                          #224

                          Yeah, I don't think anybody actually thought it was a bad movie. The real hot take is saying it was.

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                          • N [email protected]

                            Granted it's just the viewpoint of one of the prisoners but it's the one I found most intriguing.
                            To quote the movie: "Nobody knew what it was, nobody cared...there is no conspiracy, nobody is in charge. It's a headless blunder operating under the illusion of a master plan...somebody might have known sometime before they got fired, voted out, or sold it...this is an accident, a forgotten perpetual public works project. You think anybody asked questions? All they want is a clear conscience and a fat paycheck."

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                            wrote last edited by
                            #225

                            That's awesome sci-fi right there. It's a bit campy, but it's campy in the same way that all great social commentary is, until it isn't and it's too late.

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                            • N [email protected]

                              I guess I am thinking of droids as not having free will even if they are sentient.

                              I don't find the expense of a hyperdrive to be a valid point though mostly because even if they are expensive they can't be that expensive. Han Solo has one and he never seemed like a character with money. I.e. an individual likely wouldn't be able to try this but an army, with unquestioning soldiers and an immoral general would absolutely try it imo. 1 life/ship lost to kill a fleet is a worthwhile trade

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                              wrote last edited by [email protected]
                              #226

                              As far as I know all droids in Star Wars have free will.

                              Han Solo gambled and won the Falcon from Lando (who appears well off), it was definitely too expensive for him to have bought normally.

                              I think the hyperspace battering ram is funky, but I believe it was less that it was a good tactical idea and more of the First Order being extremely arrogant by not having their shields up, not using a tractor beam, and not just sending a smaller ship forward to close the gap and blowing it up.

                              I think the movie wanted to show that they were savoring the victory and were willing to draw it out as they believed the rebels were drowning in hopelessness.

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                              • L [email protected]

                                The ideas behind They Live are fascinating and deserved better treatment than a 20-minute alley fight about sunglasses.

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                                wrote last edited by
                                #227

                                I love that movie, and that fight scene, but damn you're right.

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                                • weirdgoespro@lemmy.dbzer0.comW [email protected]

                                  Have you seen him in Good Time? One of my favorite movies ever.

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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #228

                                  Big agree. Good Time turned me into a huge Pattinson fan.

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                                  • S [email protected]

                                    Lucy

                                    It’s entertaining as all hell. It doesn’t pretend to be anything more, so I don’t understand the hate it gets. Just turn off your brain, and have some fun. It’s not supposed to be hard sci-fi.

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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #229

                                    and it's only 89 minutes, it doesn't get stale or repetitive!

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                                    • W [email protected]

                                      Jupiter Ascending

                                      They seed the galaxy and harvest whole planets to create an immortality serum. Fantastic world concept ... but a subpar story to make a movie about within that world.

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                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #230

                                      And all the stuff about the genetic lottery, there being so many humans that eventually a perfect match gets born randomly is a cool premise.

                                      I wish Jupiter Ascending could have some sequels to spend going full space soap opera.

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                                      • C [email protected]

                                        Well, I mean nobody has actually made any defense for the movie here other than repeating the word "deconstruction" without elaborating any further, and I'm not going to do a deep dive and write out a counter argument to my own position, so the machine will have to do. For all we know this is the same machine that Disney used to recycle these old plot points for TLJ 😆

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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #231

                                        The "subverting expectations" thing is was ruined it for me.

                                        You could feel the "Too-clever TV writers" at work here. It felt like later-GoT and LOST where stuff randomly "just happens" and has zero payoff because it was written without any kind of grounding or plan, but it sure was surprising and subverted expectations!!! ...and then you catch on that there never was a plan, it was just a moment to get an emotional rise out of you, and nothing makes any sense outside of a very limited 5-minute window.

                                        But it's a self contained story and doesn't get potentially-numerous "seasons" to come up with a reason "This totally makes sense, you guys. I had it planned all along!"

                                        So yeah, what we're left with is a "deconstruction"...as in:

                                        "Someone kept loosening bolts and pulling off panels until the hangar was a total mess, but they still don't understand how an X-Wing works...annnd CREDITS ROLL!"

                                        Also, the way they completely dumped Finn's character and relegated him to "Guy who shouts 'RAAAAAAAAAY' every 10 minutes." is an absolute insult to competent acting and what could've been a beloved and deep character.

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                                        • S [email protected]

                                          Absolutely. But that's just my preference.

                                          Mandalorian is really just a spaghetti western with a Star Wars skin. It has cool moments, but also doesn't take itself too seriously, a mix of action and comedy, and though the individual episode plots are contrived, they know the more important things is really just spending time with the characters. But if you don't like the characters, then the whole thing kinda falls apart, like what happened with the boring Boba Fett spinoff.

                                          Andor is a spy drama which goes all in on the gravity of its plot. It's not lighthearted, doesn't have goofy moments or mascot characters, and despite taking place immediately before the original trilogy, it's not riding the coattails of nostalgia. An almost 100% human cast with no helmets or painted skin also makes it easier for the quality of acting to really shine on the screen.

                                          Merely being different doesn't inherently make one better than the other, but what makes Andor stand apart for me at least is that it is the only Star Wars property I know of that was not at all made for children. Not that it's crass or gory or full of profanity, but it tackles topics like fascism and genocide that could never be as thoroughly explored in any other Star Wars property intended for children.

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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #232

                                          Andor is an incredible espionage thriller and I do absolutely love it.

                                          This is also why I liked Rogue One and also the series "Rebels."

                                          It made the Empire believable, and the Rebels really are an insurgency, the galactic situation is dire and against overwhelming odds. It doesn't just feel like a hero fantasy.

                                          (Rebels can sometimes, it's geared to a younger audience, but it takes itself surprisingly seriously in a great way.)

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