Bright: Did you like it
I'd add more, but I loved it. LoTR's meets Training day. I thought it was great and can't wait to see part 2.
I think Netflix is on to something, and their content is typically great. They are spending 18 Billion in 2018 to make movies and new content. So what did y'all think of the movie/concept? <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/MUY3GVByRUs" frameborder="0" gesture="media" allow="encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
I keep seeing this pop up..
it has to be ****in trash |
First thing I thought of was Alien Nation with Orcs instead of aliens
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I did not hate it but would definitely need to see some world building to keep me interested. Almost thought it would be better as a series rather than some movies. |
Quote:
I think they will expand in 2nd movie (think they are hoping for trilogy) |
It was a'right. As mentioned, highly derivative of Alien Nation. Will Smith plays the same character he almost always plays.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I enjoyed it and agree with others on the needed world-building. A LOTR-like catch-me-up in the beginning would've done the trick just fine.
|
Quote:
https://www.facebook.com/netflixus/v...2177371221058/ |
I love all the elements of this film. Looks like an interesting idea. But something about it just gives me zero desire to watch it.
|
I only made it through about 35 minutes.
|
The wife has no chemistry with will
|
I thought it was great. More world building would have been great, but they gave us a peek, and the orc-based racism for the LAPD I thought was a neat analogy.
The second though, I feel will boom or bust. Many open plot threads from the 1st movie, that should they be forgotten about, will likely ruin the movie for me. |
It was interesting. Potential for better stories in this universe, but this one just wasn't all that great.
|
Alien Nation meets bad boys II
|
I am a sucker for Shadowrun and urban fantasy, so I obviously liked it.
|
Quote:
|
From what I've been hearing/reading Bright is the exact opposite of TLJ: critics hate it and the audience loves it.
I was meh before hearing that (I'm not big into fantasy) but now I feel like I have to watch it... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
As others have said, the world building and character development are weak. The story is basically a movie long chase scene. On the bright side (yeah, that was bad), the acting isn't bad and the universe and characters have lots of room to grow. It could be very good as a series with good writers. |
Made it through twenty minutes or so. Over the top social justice messaging combined with Will Smith being the exact same characters he always is make this a non starter for me.
|
Quote:
|
i didnt see it..but i loved it
|
It was entertaining. Definitely not original, but what is these days?
|
Quote:
|
The evil perpetrators were female. So it's social justice messaging when women are good guys (Star Wars) and social justice messaging when they are bad guys (Bright)? Or is the concern that Elves hate Orcs and persecute them? Or is the concern that Orcs are supposed to be persecuted because that's the natural balance (Elf Power!)?
There are three classes of "people" in this movie, and humans are in the middle. Is the social justice messaging that humans are the lapdogs of the elves? That humans treat Orcs as badly as the elves (Orc Lives Matter!)? Or that the Orcs deserve it for serving the Dark Lord? Are we seriously being offended by a fantasy movie? Are we snowflakes? |
Quote:
|
lol
So what's the offensive point? |
Quote:
|
So you are SJW defending the viewpoint that the movie has a SJW bent, and yet you don't know what it was? Yay for you!
Let's all reserve the right to be offended by everything and bitch and moan about it while we're sharing stories about our periods! Yay! |
Better yet, let's turn this thread into a Star Wars fight! Yay!
|
Quote:
|
My point, which I thought was rather obvious, was that taking offense to any agenda in this movie takes a ridiculous level of reach and requires an immense level of fear or paranoia.
What's foolish is to see an agenda around every corner. Because...aliens. Seriously. Please tell me what the agenda is. |
Quote:
I don't need to be hit over the head with agenda messaging when watching a comedy or sci if or anything else. http://ew.com/movies/2017/12/27/chan...bright-racism/ http://www.filmjournal.com/reviews/film-review-bright http://www.dailycal.org/2017/12/25/b...is-will-smith/ |
Thought it sucked tbh. The director (David Ayer) is so hit or miss for me. I can't believe this is from the same guy that directed Fury & End of Watch (two excellent films ) and then he shits the bed with Suicide Squad & Bright. Very puzzling .
And I saw that Netflix has a sequel ready for Bright...smh. |
lol
It's always about race with you people. It could just as easily be about caste systems in general, such as India's or medieval feudal lords, nobles, merchants, and peasants. Stop being a snowflake. Damn cucks. |
Quote:
Not going to work. Did you even read the links? |
Back to the movie, I thought it was decent. It should be noted though that I have not seen Alien Nation.
I read some of the comments here before I sat down to watch it. The first thing is this isn't the same old Smith as far as I can tell. Sure, he had some of the same old mannerisms that he always does in action movies, but he hasn't really taken the role of a lost soul before. And remember when he said he was above cussing (ROFL). To that end, the production and acting was pretty good. As far as the world building goes, it could have used some more, and I think the post above with a quick voice-over would have done it. Groundbreaking? No. Good? Yes. |
Quote:
|
:)
The movie wasn't that bad. Complaining about a social agenda in a mediocre fantasy film is like complaining that the last Chuck Norris movie was pushing violence to solve problems. Seriously, one group of people subjugating another due to race, religion, class, or whatever has been going on since the beginning. Being offended by this would be like being offended by sex or violence in a movie. So, when is it not "too soon"? In just about every fantasy story that includes Orcs and Elves the two are at war and killing each other. One side NOT trying to destroy or control the other would be the real agenda here. You're trying to change the history of these fantasy stories to fit your moral compass. Are they supposed to be getting along and happy? Might as well make Thor a woman if that's what you want. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
But as far as actual criticism, this movie felt like bad Shadowrun fan fiction. |
Social and political commentary is pretty much the raison d’etre for sci-fi and fantasy. If you don’t like the message, that’s fine... but it’s not like this is some new over the top leftist movie. Similarly, the latest Star Wars is getting this “rightwashing” treatment. It looks like the right wing is trying to more fully engage in the culture wars.
|
Quote:
This is no Stranger in a Strange Land. This is a ham-handed effort that is laughable in it's efforts to push an agenda. This critic nailed it pretty well: ..."It’s rare to see a movie so toxic that it manages to raise multiple red flags before the very first shot, but “Bright” is a special piece of work. As if the goofy crackle of blue magic that runs through the Netflix logo isn’t enough of a warning sign, that gag is followed by a card for a production company called “Trigger Warning Entertainment.” Just gonna go out on a limb and suggest that these might not be the best people to make a thinly veiled metaphor for America’s racial violence that starts with Will Smith swatting a rodent-like garden sprite and declaring that “Fairy lives don’t matter!” Lock and load, snowflakes! Smith, in a hangdog performance so dispiriting that it might genuinely make you pity one of the world’s most successful people, stars as Daryl Ward, a second lieutenant who was just shot in the line of duty. Daryl had the bad luck of being partnered with Nick Jakoby, the first Orc on the force, and he paid a stiff price for his involuntary role in social progress. Nick (played by Joel Edgerton, mercifully unrecognizable underneath a splotchy latex mask that makes him look like a syphilitic Navy Seal), is just a nice guy who happens to be making history. Nick never wanted to be the Jackie Robinson of of the LAPD, he just dreamed of having a badge. Unfortunately, orcs see him as a traitor, and humans see him as a monster, so Daryl is his only genuine shot at acceptance. (Spoiler alert: It turns out that who you are on the inside is all that really matters.) The two of them are going to have to forge some kind of mutual trust if they hope to survive the long night to come, which starts when a routine house call spirals out of control and leaves them fending off racist cops, protecting a mute elf (Lucy Fry), and trying to stop her sister (Noomi Rapace) from summoning “the dark lord” or whatever. Oh yeah, “Bright” leans way too hard hard on “whatever.” As if the film’s racial dynamics aren’t flimsy enough — don’t ask how black people fit into a story that problematically recodes them as a violent breed of orcs who are responsible for their own subjugation, because screenwriter Max Landis never did — its fantasy mythology is even less coherent. Guillermo del Toro puts more thought into a single one of his creatures than Landis and Ayer manage to spread across the entirety of this interminable “Funny or Die” sketch, as every attempt at world-building is so feeble that it feels like the film is making fun of its own thoughtlessness."... http://www.indiewire.com/2017/12/bri...17-1201909960/ |
There were so many cool ways they could have went with this movie, but they chose the shitty cop drama. Overplayed 80s bullshit cop drama.
I like the idea of the world it is set in. But the good cop, bad cop, buddy cop bullshit is lame. There was zero character development, and zero emotion in it. |
I was entertained...hoping they expand in the 2nd one. Give it a 7/10
|
Was not a fan.
|
Quote:
|
I'm looking forward to Bright2. Won't have much for expectations, but seems it will be either a total train wreck, which will be fun to mock, or make a step up and be fun to watch.
|
@Variety: Will Smith, Joel Edgerton, and David Ayer are returning for the #Bright sequel without writer Max Landis http://bit.ly/2DWGRrf https://twitter.com/Variety/status/9...068993/photo/1
|
Quote:
Netflix doesn't care about opinions they care about views. They want quality content and they have earned my trust... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I'd still argue the quality of...eh...**** me... |
Quote:
I was just posting it because it seemed to fit. That episode was hilarious. |
Quote:
I CONSISTENTLY quote SP as pointing out how you know you're wrong (right or left.) The problem is there's no way Trump will slap down FOX getting reerun money to further their media push. And I'm a Trump fan. It's a bad idea. I don't want SJW'S making films and I wouldn't want Kirk ****ing Cameran running a studio... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Oh. OK, thanks. Now I know not to bother trying to watch this. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
While I wouldn't say it was good I did like it.
|
Quote:
Lethal Weapon turned sci-fi. It wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t anything special either. But I was entertained for 2 hours. |
Quote:
|
No interest. I wish it would stop auto previewing every time I log in to Netflix on my Roku.
|
Did I like it?
Not really. |
I liked it, but I wanted to like it more. It really was preachy as ****, but there definitely were elements that I enjoyed and make a sequel intriguing.
|
Quote:
|
Everyone trying to steal the wand. Just let them ****ing have it and watch them blow the **** up.
|
Quote:
But, if they know how to use it, they can just go back in time and undo the transaction just to **** them over. |
Quote:
The movie was mildly entertaining, but it was mostly pretty shit with a dose of preaching. |
Quote:
Why?... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
There are plot holes all over this movie. It's not great cinema.
Spoiler!
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:48 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.