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Published on June 11, 2013 By Frogboy In Movies & TV & Books

My hopes are so high for is movie!

I'm wondering if Clark Kent (with glasses) ever makes an appearance?


Comments (Page 3)
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on Dec 10, 2013

Kantok

My main problem with the movie was Zach Snyder. He thinks that the more over the top the action the better it is. The guy wouldn't know subtlety if it hit him in the face. The story, acting and production were all great.
A michael bayesque approach to movies.

I liked Snyder's Watchmen myself.   The slowmo action thing kinda grows old but think the movie itself was pretty solid adaptation. 

 

Also 300   

Thish ish SPARTA!!!  

on Dec 10, 2013

smeagolheart


Quoting Kantok, reply 25
My main problem with the movie was Zach Snyder. He thinks that the more over the top the action the better it is. The guy wouldn't know subtlety if it hit him in the face. The story, acting and production were all great. A michael bayesque approach to movies.

I liked Snyder's Watchmen myself.   The slowmo action thing kinda grows old but think the movie itself was pretty solid adaptation. 

 

Also 300   

Thish ish SPARTA!!!  

300 is the problem.  It was well done and successful, but he's seems unable to realize that the 300 style doesn't fit every single movie he touches.  The action in MoS was practically cartoonish and didn't fit the serious, Christopher Nolan's Batman style vibe they were trying to go for with the story and the acting.  

The two halves of the film were completely out of sync with what they were trying to convey. 

on Dec 11, 2013



Quoting Mystikmind, reply 26but it did strike me as odd the huge inconsistency with the effect of cryptonyte

Perhaps that's down to the huge inconsistency with the spelling of 'Kryptonite' .... ....

 

Oooh did i 'imagine' the incorrect imaginary spelling of an imaginary element???

on Dec 11, 2013

Mystikmind

Quoting Jafo, reply 27

Quoting Mystikmind, reply 26but it did strike me as odd the huge inconsistency with the effect of cryptonyte

Perhaps that's down to the huge inconsistency with the spelling of 'Kryptonite' .... ....

 

Oooh did i 'imagine' the incorrect imaginary spelling of an imaginary element???

 

*somewhere in Heaven John Lennon sheds a tear*

on Dec 11, 2013

Mystikmind
Oooh did i 'imagine' the incorrect imaginary spelling of an imaginary element???

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodic_table 

It's Number 36.

One day...when you study Chemistry...in high school .....you'll know them ....

on Dec 11, 2013



Quoting Mystikmind, reply 33Oooh did i 'imagine' the incorrect imaginary spelling of an imaginary element???

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Periodic_table 

It's Number 36.

One day...when you study Chemistry...in high school .....you'll know them ....

 

So you like Wikipedia? Try this one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kryptonite

 

Here is a quote: "Kryptonite is a fictional material from the Superman mythos"

 

Hows your high school 'Chemistry" now?

on Dec 11, 2013

smeagolheart


Quoting Mystikmind, reply 33
Quoting Jafo, reply 27

Quoting Mystikmind, reply 26but it did strike me as odd the huge inconsistency with the effect of cryptonyte

Perhaps that's down to the huge inconsistency with the spelling of 'Kryptonite' .... ....

 

Oooh did i 'imagine' the incorrect imaginary spelling of an imaginary element???

 

*somewhere in Heaven John Lennon sheds a tear*

 

Imagine that? (Too obvious i know, but could not bear to pass it up)

on Dec 12, 2013

Mystikmind
Hows your high school 'Chemistry" now?

Krypton ... it's still Number 36.

The spelling is correct...but nice try.

Both are derived from the Greek 'kryptos' meaning 'hidden'.

The Periodic Table existed before Wiki....and before computers, for that matter...

on Dec 12, 2013


Quoting Mystikmind, reply 36Hows your high school 'Chemistry" now?

Krypton ... it's still Number 36.

The spelling is correct...but nice try.

Both are derived from the Greek 'kryptos' meaning 'hidden'.

The Periodic Table existed before Wiki....and before computers, for that matter...

 

May 30, 1898: Krypton Discovered, Decades Before Superman Arrives

http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/05/dayintech_0530

 

on Dec 12, 2013

Real life is sometimes more amazing than the most amazing fiction

In a few weeks researches discovered many new elements by heating some air ... those were the good old days ... nowadays they've to build a large collider to discover new elements (actually they've to create the new elements first in the process).

 

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