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Back to MTR: I REALLY hope that they don't get rid of that villain.
I mean, look at him. He looks like one of those ecentric, insanely evil people that movie fans have grown to love.
I wish I had a pic handy...
I mean, look at him. He looks like one of those ecentric, insanely evil people that movie fans have grown to love.
I wish I had a pic handy...
"Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift--that is why it's called the present."
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I'll be honest - from what I've seen, the villain just really hasn't done anything for me with the typr of movie I've been lead to believe this will be. I've got alot of hopes for it though and have since the beginning whether Pixar is involved or not.
"We're Dead! We're Dead! We Survived but We're Dead!!!" -Dash- "The Incredibles"
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(not trying to flame Pixar! )They don't really have good old fashioned "baddies" - their films mostly have characters up against a tough situation, but so far all I can think of was Spacey's grasshopper in A Bug's Life.
Oh so true....it's all about: "Oh no, I'm a toy who's about to get thrown out!" or "I'm a car who might rust!" It's like they're afraid of actually showing real danger or fear, there has to be a soft edge on everything.
That's my opinion. It's like those picture books you looked at when you were a little kid, IE: Peter Rabbit, that never really acknowleged "bad" things in the world. That's why when you get older you start reading Narnia books....
AND I LOVE Syndrome, like, one of my fave villains in ANY movie, EVER, (thoughIncredibles is like a Brad Bird film), because you actually get the feeling that Hey! These characters are in actual peril. Syndrome was self-absorbed, mercilless, frightening and cruel. And yet you still feel kinda sorry for him....
I think the MTR villain looked neat. And I really don't understand all this script surgery....I mean haven't the rumors from the past year, from different blogs and so forth, all testified to the fact that MTR is shaping up to be a very good film? Is it just not "Pixary" enough? Sheesh!
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
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Good questions, Violet. Maybe Jim Hill has the answers for you: http://www.jimhillmedia.com/article.php?id=1889. Basically, the original storyboards for A Day with Wilbur Robinson were fantastic. However...ShyViolet wrote:I really don't understand all this script surgery....I mean haven't the rumors from the past year, from different blogs and so forth, all testified to the fact that MTR is shaping up to be a very good film? Is it just not "Pixary" enough?
Jim Hill wrote:The original storyboards for "A Day with Wilbur Robinson" weren't transferred directly to the screen as is. Given that this was the very first theatrical release that the then-head of Disney Feature Animation, David Stainton, had personally put into production ... Well, David allegedly had a lot of notes for Stephen. And -- with each new set of notes -- "A Day with Wilbur Robinson" got more and more diluted. Moving further & further away from that original strong first draft.
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Okay - shoot me, I can't remember - but did anyone DIE in The Incredibles?ShyViolet wrote:AND I LOVE Syndrome, like, one of my fave villains in ANY movie, EVER, (thoughIncredibles is like a Brad Bird film), because you actually get the feeling that Hey! These characters are in actual peril.
I'm not talking the superheroes mis-haps with capes and things, but a real, on-screen death that REALLY puts Syndrome in the top league? I don't think so, which still, for me, only puits Syndrome down as an enjoyable but, let's face it, ineffectual COMEDY villain.
Tell me if I'm wrong, but I never saw Syndrome as anything like a threat that the family, when they "hey, all work together", couldn't handle.
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You do have a point Ben, like when that giant robot or omniroid was stampeding through the city at the end of the movie, you KNOW they're going to defeat it because they're the ones with all the powers, and Syndrome doesn't even have any. Rocket shoes--come on! Right away they get the remote control--awfully convenient. And like you said in your comments back then, THERE'S NO ONE IN THE CITY AT THE TIME! Where are all the screaming people? Where's the destruction and devastation? Even when things get tense and he steals their baby, the script deflates the tension almost right away by giving the baby super powers and turning it into a humorous situation by having Jack-Jack beat up Syndrome, and then Syndrome getting his cape stuck in the engine.Tell me if I'm wrong, but I never saw Syndrome as anything like a threat that the family, when they "hey, all work together", couldn't handle.
On the island there's some scary parts, but even the kids are so powerful that you never really do get the sense that they're in REAL danger. They might have maybe put a "non-super" like Kari in danger at the end for some suspense, but that doesn't happen either.
Yeah, just hope they don't decide to make them too "Pixary"Yeah, I think the double-whammy of American Dog's fantatsic, totally new look and feel, and Rapunzel's return to fairytale glory is what is going to put Disney back on the map.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!