BJW1072
Just a little freaky
Warts & all, I like the DCEU. That being said...that tornado scene is just plain stupid. I liked Costner as Jonathan Kent, but the writing of that character was downright laughable.
totally agree with this. A lot of Civil War makes no sense to me and is pretty laughable as a whole.I find the scene where Rhodey gets shot down laughable – IM tells Vision to shoot Falcon... I guy with only a set of wings... so he didn't mind him plummetting to his death, but when Vision misses and hits War Machine (a guy in protective, super duper armour) instead, it's suddenly terrible... you told him to take the shot!!!
:good post: seems to always be the casethat is so stupid but hey it's MCU- it all gets a pass so they can rag on BvS
totally agree hereFor my personal taste, I prefer the tone of the DCEU films than the MCU.
I personally liked the tornado scene in MoS. I can understand where people are coming from when they say Superman would never let his father die, which on the surface is true, but I think the psychology behind the scene does make sense when you go beyond the surface. The way I saw it was Clark was not "Superman" at that point, or at any point in MoS really. During the tornado scene, he was simply 17 year old Clark Kent who was unsure of who he was. However, the fact that he chose to save his classmates in the school bus and actually was about to run out to save Jonathan, demonstrated his natural inclination to want to help others. Clark didn't "let" Jonathan die, Jonathan made a choice and a sacrifice. Not to mention by the way we don't know at this point how developed Clark's abilities were and if he was even aware of what he could do to his full potential.
Would Superman have saved him anyway? Absolutely, and mostly because at that point he would have already been revealed to the world. But to a 17 year old Clark who was unsure of who he was and with his father giving him a firm "no", after him already having explained the ramifications of revealing himself and why he was trying to protect him, made sense to me from a psychological sense. Even a 35 year old (presumably, since BvS took place two years after MoS where he stated he was 33) Superman in BvS was having trouble dealing with the ramifications of him revealing himself; imagine how a 17 year old would (or wouldn't) be able to handle it.
Yes! In Kill Bill, Tarantino gets a lot of credit for that Clark Kent v. Superman speech, but what I think MoS got right was that it isn't Clark v. Superman so much as it is Clark + Kal-El = Superman, and it takes time to get there and balance that equation. An orphan of one world, an adopted son of another, he chooses to make himself into Superman. I thought it was great.For my personal taste, I prefer the tone of the DCEU films than the MCU.
I personally liked the tornado scene in MoS. I can understand where people are coming from when they say Superman would never let his father die, which on the surface is true, but I think the psychology behind the scene does make sense when you go beyond the surface. The way I saw it was Clark was not "Superman" at that point, or at any point in MoS really. During the tornado scene, he was simply 17 year old Clark Kent who was unsure of who he was. However, the fact that he chose to save his classmates in the school bus and actually was about to run out to save Jonathan, demonstrated his natural inclination to want to help others. Clark didn't "let" Jonathan die, Jonathan made a choice and a sacrifice. Not to mention by the way we don't know at this point how developed Clark's abilities were and if he was even aware of what he could do to his full potential.
Would Superman have saved him anyway? Absolutely, and mostly because at that point he would have already been revealed to the world. But to a 17 year old Clark who was unsure of who he was and with his father giving him a firm "no", after him already having explained the ramifications of revealing himself and why he was trying to protect him, made sense to me from a psychological sense. Even a 35 year old (presumably, since BvS took place two years after MoS where he stated he was 33) Superman in BvS was having trouble dealing with the ramifications of him revealing himself; imagine how a 17 year old would (or wouldn't) be able to handle it.
Marvel and DC are different so it's not fair to compare them imo. Marvel movies are supposed to be fun and lighthearted, all with an inspirational undertone, while DC is more dark and gritty. Both studios are different, and that's why I love them. They both shouldn't do the same thing imo ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
totally agree here
Yes! In Kill Bill, Tarantino gets a lot of credit for that Clark Kent v. Superman speech, but what I think MoS got right was that it isn't Clark v. Superman so much as it is Clark + Kal-El = Superman, and it takes time to get there and balance that equation. An orphan of one world, an adopted son of another, he chooses to make himself into Superman. I thought it was great.
I guess end of the day.
If you are happy with the headsculpt, try get it. (If it's within your financial means)
If you are not happy with the HS, don't force yourself to get it. ( you may if you have too much money).
Just a hobby, I am sure many collectors here admire their priced collection themselves more than for showing off to others..
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Heh XL SHop had my PO a year ago lol. I just wanted to see the final HS, I did and I'm pleased.
But it has the opposite shoulder belt as portrayed in posters...
I think it's correct as per the movie
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Right, it is in JL and solo movie that user the belt in opposit side
Warts & all, I like the DCEU. That being said...that tornado scene is just plain stupid. I liked Costner as Jonathan Kent, but the writing of that character was downright laughable.
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