I will probably pirate it.
Will be pleasantly surprised if it doesn’t blow. On one hand GL’s involvement was minor and Disney isn’t known for making garbage, on the other hand, JJ Abrams
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pegJQPIzfs4
“Tie fighters are still cool, right?”.
“Will be pleasantly surprised if it doesnât blow. On one hand GLâs involvement was minor and Disney isnât known for making garbage, on the other hand, JJ Abrams.”
I concur.
“Krysten Ritter â
Ah yes...”The Fappening”! WB with the wrath & fury of Eric Cartman’s love of KFC.
“>>I bought my ticket for Saturday December 19.<< I will post my review Sunday the 20th.”
Really? Well, there goes my respect for you, Harry Palmer. (I’m joking!). Again, I’ll echo Impy and say I’ll be pleasantly surprised if it doesn’t blow. Be safe at the theater and enjoy. If they try to pack 30 lbs of groceries in a 5 lb bag (Carrie Fisher in a bikini), please warn us of that disturbance in the force...
Yeah, not falling for that again...
The one bright spot this time around is George Lucas ISN'T in charge of the film, which means there's a possibility that it won't suck (the George Lucas rule is similar to the Stephen King rule... the LESS the creator of the franchise is involved in micromanaging new films using his property, the better the results will be). On the other hand, JJ Abrams IS in charge, which means we'll look forward to more lens flares, plot holes, and mindless action sequences. Can't say I have faith in the guy after Super 8 and Star Trek Into Darkness -- both films were "meh" although they certainly LOOKED sleek.
I'm reminded of last year's summer "event" movie, Godzilla, where it was being hyped as a MUST SEE theatrical experience, and I told everyone that I had zero desire to see another American-made Godzilla on the big screen after the overhyped Matthew Broderick flop in the 90s. Their response was that I was just jaded by a campy ridiculous 90s movie, but Godzilla was being done by different people THIS time and it would be different because it would be FAITHFUL to the Japanese original and an incredibly exciting experience.
Finally watched both American Godzilla's (1998 Broderick film and 2014 "reboot") on DVD a couple months back. The 2014 version wasn't "better", unless you count the new CGI Godzilla looking closer to the 1950s rubber suit design as "better". Neither film was particularly good, but the '98 version was a tad more fun and entertaining. The 2014 film went downhill after Bryan Cranston's character died. Godzilla himself got about 15 minutes screentime in his own movie (the 2014 film should have been called "Mutos", as those monsters ended up on screen much more). Both '98 and 2014 had about equal amounts of "callbacks" and references to the original Japanese film, with some token Japanese character appearing along with the American cast.
I'm glad I waited for the DVD to see the "new and improved" Godzilla, and I will likely do the same with the "new and improved" Star Wars. Unless the film is getting overwhelmingly positive reviews, its strictly "wait for DVD" to me.