"how???
heres your quote"
Oh, I see. You weren't clear in terms of the context in which you were speaking. When you wrote "I'm an idiot", I thought you had meant yourself when you had replied to this:
"I think part of the problem was that we the audience have been a little spoiled when it came to what we wanted that the end result was much too reserved for our liking. The other problem is the view that this is an "action" flick."
I thought you had meant that you somehow took my comments as to meaning that you "didn't get it" or whatever and took offense. Just to correct you, there's two fight scenes, not three - the one in the city had been drawn out for several hours.
Going to this point:
"Then the next time there's going to be monster action, they show a brief look at the Muto on an unnoticed TV screen in Las Vegas, then above it rips open the ceiling of that casino and immediately cuts away from the scene to show only the aftermath"
In my defense, I thought he was strictly talking in terms of monsters fighting, not in terms of monsters going on the rampage.
"so you are trying to talk about this film and expect people to take you opinion and analysis seriously, then you get a basic fact, and one of the cruxes of your arguement entirely wrong... how do you expect to be taken seriously and not called a joke???"
Ooh, I made a mistake. Shoot me. :P
I wasn't wrong in terms of what I was saying - that there were plenty of epic moments, that the problem wasn't the lack of Godzilla or his build-up but the lack of strong characters, etc.
"again, are you uneducated or just not very intelligent??"
Considering the frequency of your grammatical, punctuation and spelling errors, you're not one to talk with regards to intelligence or education, as it's pretty apparent you're no Mensa candidate. The only reason you seem to be responding to a post made back in 2015 is to pick a fight - that, and perhaps to boost your own self-worth by trying to convince yourself that my one mistake makes you somehow better and alleviates you of whatever inadequacies you possess. I may have made a mistake, but at least I have the education and backbone to acknowledge it.
"its obviously trying to follow the jaws and cloverfield formula to an extent..... besides this it saves them a massive amount of money, only having to show one Muto walking and in focus, while skipping far more special effects intensive and the costly 3 other fights it could of shown (one fight according to you, but youve been proven to not know what you are talking about
are you really comparing this to transformers..... and marvel films...........
please stop talking"
Before being completely dismissive and a total mental midget, allow me to explain. While as a general rule one shouldn't compare movies of a certain genre/subgenre to those belonging to another, it is worth pointing out that in general big budgeted Hollywood blockbusters, movies with hundreds of millions of dollars such as Marvel movies, "Pirates of the Caribbean", "Transformers" (can't really say much about the series itself since I only saw the first one), and others tend to go all-out with the action, spectacle and set-pieces, often times with little in the way of restraint ("more is more"), so to a certain extent, it's not as ridiculous as you make it out to be. If you want something a little more appropriate and more relevant to the subgenre that "Godzilla" is part of, however, I suppose "Pacific Rim" would be such (to an extent).
In terms of "Godzilla 2014", as you had noted it was trying to follow the "Jaws" formula of "less was more", possibly as a way of saving money, but it seems more as a way of building up suspense and the spectacle of seeing the creatures in their entirety from human level. However, even for something that is a giant monster movie, a big budget Hollywood movie especially, it is unusually reserved. I kept getting the impression that there was more material that had been dropped onto the cutting room floor due to the way the movie was edited. The cut from the airport battle to having it play on television in the 2014 movie was an interesting decision, even a bold one, but presumably having such a thing would have been predicated on the idea of it either trying to make a point and/or will eventually lead to something more, like we'd get to see something truly spectacular that hadn't been revealed by the trailers. That, and the writing, if not the human element being strong enough to allow for such a thing.
It's possible that there could be another cut of the movie that is different from what we currently have, not unlike how Richard Donner's "Superman 2" is vastly different from the Richard Lester version, as I remember there was supposed to be a cameo of Akira Takarada, but that wasn't at all featured.
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