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bowener 06-24-2013 01:31 PM

Disaster Analysts Estimate The Fictional Destruction In 'Man of Steel' Would Cost $750 Billion

Quote:

A few folks (including Daredevil writer Mark Waid and ComicsAlliance's Chris Sims) have referred to elements of director Zack Snyder's Man of Steel as "disaster porn," but just how much damage is actually dealt by Superman, Zod and company in the movie?

Buzzfeed aimed to find out, so it contacted the folks at Watson Technical Consulting to assess the cost, in lives and in monetary figures. The results are pretty staggering.

Watson's analysts say the destruction of Metropolis in the movie would be comparable to the United States dropping the atomic bomb on Nagasaki in World War II, with 129,000 people confirmed dead, another 250,000 missing and likely dead, and another million people injured. The damage zone would be about a mile in diameter.

The monetary hit? $750 billion, with a total economic impact of $2 trillion. For comparison, the 9/11 attacks did about $55 billion worth of damage, with a total impact of $123 billion. Man of Steel's estimated movie budget was a comparatively cheap $255 million.

How does Man of Steel's movie mayhem compare to other films in the superhero genre? Last year, Kinetic Analysis Corp. (yes, there are apparently two separate firms who do this kind of thing) estimated the damage to New York in The Avengers at about $160 billion.

Looks like we have a new measure for superhero films that goes beyond simple box office. Step your game up, Avengers 2. Get to work on wiping out a whole state!

Read More: http://www.comicsalliance.com/2013/0...#ixzz2XADO5PYj

Red Brooklyn 06-24-2013 01:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kysirsoze (Post 9772725)
Most of the complaints are about the needless destruction with zero consideration given by the film's hero. I never questioned Batman's commitment to Gotham, because the film made that one of the central themes and it was well developed. I didn't get that commitment or concern from Supes in MoS.

In the Batman series, the destruction had impact. In MoS it was hollow. After the catastrophe he's like "I guess I'll become a reporter now!" Not a second thought was given to the likely millions dead. Sure it'll probably be all over the place in the sequel, but in this movie, it made Superman seem cold. More alien than human, which is a weird place to start the series.

Unless that's the main thrust of a multi-film arch.

I don't know. I haven't seen Man of Steel yet. Probably won't until it's on Netflix.

DaneMcCloud 06-24-2013 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 9772396)
I didn't even know Monsters University had started yet.

We saw it yesterday. I give it a solid "meh".

It wasn't nearly as witty or funny or fun as the original. The original's music and score was fun, jazzy and had the signature "Randy Newman" sound, this was just your standard, big budget sounding music. Blech.

The story line, IMO, was "okay" but probably too old for younger viewer (Frat houses, college pranks, etc.). The dialog was jilted and forced and the overall narrative seemed "off" to me.

There were only a couple of moments where I laughed. Both Billy Crystal and John Goodman seemed off their game or disinterested because I felt at times as if they were just reading lines.

kysirsoze 06-24-2013 01:42 PM

LMAO

kysirsoze 06-24-2013 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud (Post 9772785)
We saw it yesterday. I give it a solid "meh".

It wasn't nearly as witty or funny or fun as the original. The original's music and score was fun, jazzy and had the signature "Randy Newman" sound, this was just your standard, big budget sounding music. Blech.

The story line, IMO, was "okay" but probably too old for younger viewer (Frat houses, college pranks, etc.). The dialog was jilted and forced and the overall narrative seemed "off" to me.

There were only a couple of moments where I laughed. Both Billy Crystal and John Goodman seemed off their game or disinterested because I felt at times as if they were just reading lines.


I was really confused for a second reading this as a Man of Steel review.

Fire Me Boy! 06-24-2013 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud (Post 9772785)
We saw it yesterday. I give it a solid "meh".

It wasn't nearly as witty or funny or fun as the original. The original's music and score was fun, jazzy and had the signature "Randy Newman" sound, this was just your standard, big budget sounding music. Blech.

The story line, IMO, was "okay" but probably too old for younger viewer (Frat houses, college pranks, etc.). The dialog was jilted and forced and the overall narrative seemed "off" to me.

There were only a couple of moments where I laughed. Both Billy Crystal and John Goodman seemed off their game or disinterested because I felt at times as if they were just reading lines.

Wait... you're saying one of John Williams' most iconic scores had a signature Randy Newman sound?

Fire Me Boy! 06-24-2013 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kysirsoze (Post 9772795)
I was really confused for a second reading this as a Man of Steel review.

I didn't get past the part about Randy Newman score to even finish the post, and apparently I didn't read the quote either!

ROFL

007 06-24-2013 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud (Post 9772785)
We saw it yesterday. I give it a solid "meh".

It wasn't nearly as witty or funny or fun as the original. The original's music and score was fun, jazzy and had the signature "Randy Newman" sound, this was just your standard, big budget sounding music. Blech.

The story line, IMO, was "okay" but probably too old for younger viewer (Frat houses, college pranks, etc.). The dialog was jilted and forced and the overall narrative seemed "off" to me.

There were only a couple of moments where I laughed. Both Billy Crystal and John Goodman seemed off their game or disinterested because I felt at times as if they were just reading lines.

Good to know. Thanks


Did they destroy the university and kill some monsters with it?

DaneMcCloud 06-24-2013 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 9772809)
Good to know. Thanks


Did they destroy the university and kill some monsters with it?

No, no death, no destruction, no real pain or loss. There wasn't really even an antagonist.

The short film "The Blue Umbrella" aired before Monster's U and was infinitely more interesting and entertaining.

007 06-24-2013 01:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud (Post 9772820)
No, no death, no destruction, no real pain or loss. There wasn't really even an antagonist.

The short film "The Blue Umbrella" aired before Monster's U and was infinitely more interesting and entertaining.

Blue umbrellas are so sad.

DaneMcCloud 06-24-2013 02:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 9772827)
Blue umbrellas are so sad.

http://geekdad.com/2013/06/the-blue-...rs-university/

Chiefspants 06-24-2013 02:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud (Post 9772843)

Dane, you may have talked about this earlier in the thread, but is Man of Steel's 65% drop on weekend two concerning at all for the studio?

Red Brooklyn 06-24-2013 03:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chiefspants (Post 9772877)
Dane, you may have talked about this earlier in the thread, but is Man of Steel's 65% drop on weekend two concerning at all for the studio?

I'm not Dane and I don't have his contacts, but I have to believe it's a concern. I just don't know to what degree. But they can't like that.

I wonder if anyone's job is in any real jeopardy. Specifically Snyder.

Chiefspants 06-24-2013 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Red Brooklyn (Post 9772979)
I'm not Dane and I don't have his contacts, but I have to believe it's a concern. I just don't know to what degree. But they can't like that.

I wonder if anyone's job is in any real jeopardy. Specifically Snyder.

I realize I'm not a huge fan of Snyder, but one has to believe that a "Sucker Punch" quality sequel could be devastating for DC's future.

Red Brooklyn 06-24-2013 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chiefspants (Post 9772990)
I realize I'm not a huge fan of Snyder, but one has to believe that a "Sucker Punch" quality sequel could be devastating for DC's future.

And you know they aren't gonna aim all guns at Nolan. I'm not even sure how much input/influence he hand on Man of Steel, anyway.

Maybe Goyer's in some hot water, too?

But, yeah, if they stick with Snyder and he botches the sequel, that'll be hell to rebound from. They'll almost have to reboot all over again.

Though, I've seen that they're already moving ahead with JL plans based on this version of Supes. There are tons of implications in this whole thing.


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