MovieChat Forums > Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) Discussion > EDIT#1-The Final Insult For DC fans,It O...

EDIT#1-The Final Insult For DC fans,It Offically Can't Get Any Worse lol


lol I honestly didn't think It could get any worse for DC fans...
.
lol you just waited 3 years for A truly once in a lifetime Movie In BvS that turned out to be One of The worst CBM's ever and Had the biggest box office collapse in History...

and it just got worse, Not only did you have your dreams crushed by BvS turning out to be one of the worst CBM's ever and A Massive box office disappointment...Now The Final Insult has arrived...

Now your forced to watch Marvel Studios and Civil War have the Success You dream about for BvS...Everything that you hoped,prayed and expected out of BvS, Your getting ready to watch happen With Marvel Studios and Civil War

lol watching BvS get some of the worst reviews ever for A CBM is Bad, watching BvS have the biggest Box office collapse ever is bad, But NOw having to watch Civil War get excellent reviews and Watching Civil War Make Over 1 Billion like you Desperately wanted for BvS Is JUST WORSE

and finally having to read review after review going into detail how much better Civil War is than BvS is.....The Final Insult

lol theres been 25 reviews released so far for Civil War, 24 are extremely Positive but thats not the kick, Nope the Kicker is, 14 of the 25 reviews Literally going into detail Why Marvel Studios and Civil War Succeeded and WB/DC and BvS failed--

lol Here it is, The Final Insult for DC Fans...

http://www.thewrap.com/captain-america-civil-war-review-mcu/

It’s also the reason most of the Avengers (Hulk and Thor are on sabbatical) spend the bulk of “Captain America: Civil War” fighting among themselves. For audiences feeling burned by the superhero brawling in “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” just hang on — it’s not what you’re thinking.

See Video: 'Captain America: Civil War' New Clip Shows Team Cap in Action

Unlike DC’s recent franchise brick, a film that spent an inordinate amount of time mulling over issues of personal enmity against an incoherently darkened landscape, and that offered little more than lip service to the matter of collateral damage, “Civil War” is an addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe that, yes, moves its good guys to battle each other, but does so in the service of establishing a future of superhero responsibility.


http://variety.com/2016/film/reviews/captain-america-civil-war-review-1201752643/


The shaming of “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” will continue apace — or better still, be forgotten entirely — in the wake of “Captain America: Civil War,” a decisively superior hero-vs.-hero extravaganza that also ranks as the most mature and substantive picture to have yet emerged from the Marvel Cinematic Universe.


http://www.gamesradar.com/captain-america-civil-war-review/
It’s all been building to this. From the three-way forest throw-downs and Hulk-shaped sucker punches of Avengers Assemble to Civil War’s savvy, hashtag-powered marketing campaign prompting True Believers to pick a side, the prospect of Marvel's mightiest going toe to toe in a superhuman dust-up has been irresistibly enticing. That it arrives in cinemas little more than a month after DC’s own clash of the titans failed to land a knockout blow feels all the sweeter because, rest assured, Civil War delivers on the promise of that title in a major way.

As a piece of superhero storytelling, it doesn’t bring anything particularly innovative to the table either – the idea of a thin line between heroes and vigilantes is invoked again, for example. But importantly, given the callous loss of life going on in other comic-book movies, the human cost of the Avengers’ actions is keenly felt and addressed in a meaningful way. It makes DC’s efforts to tackle the same idea with Batman v Superman seem thunderously dunderheaded in comparison.


http://www.screendaily.com/reviews/captain-america-civil-war-review/5102527.article?blocktitle=Latest-Reviews&contentID=592
this follow-up to 2014’s Captain America: The Winter Soldier (which netted $714 million globally) seems poised to kick off the summer movie season in fabulous fashion. Strong reviews, which will probably compare it very favourably to another comic-book movie about warring superheroes, the much-maligned Batman V Superman, will only further boost Civil War’s must-see status.


http://www.empireonline.com/movies/captain-america-civil-war/review/
Who needs a villain when you have Steve and Tony? Both protagonists. Both antagonists. And drawing other power-people to their cause in surprising ways. The clashes go far beyond the set-up squabbles of Avengers Assemble. Or even that other big 2016 superhero showdown. Forget Batman v Superman. Here you get Ant-Man v Spider-Man, Hawkeye v Black Widow, Scarlet Witch v Vision, The Winter Soldier v Black Panther and (well, duh) Captain America v Iron Man, all rolled into one. And that is what you call the ultimate Marvel superhero event.


http://uproxx.com/movies/captain-america-civil-war-review/
This is the point in this piece where I mention Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. I didn’t really want to, but it’s incredible how watchable Captain America: Civil War is and how dull Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice turned out to be when you consider that both movies have pretty similar core plots: Superheroes fighting against each other, a mysterious figure behind the scenes pulling the strings … and, remarkably, a superhero’s mother plays a large role in both films. Yet Marvel has this down. Marvel knows how to move the story along and keep us entertained. Marvel knows how to trick us into liking these characters and caring about what happens to them. (That trick is by making them “likable.”)



http://www.craveonline.com/entertainment/976373-captain-america-civil-war-review-fight#/slide/1
When a tragedy occurs, and someone close to Captain America is put in the crosshairs, the schism between the Avengers widens and Captain America and Iron Man are forced to assemble their own separate teams. Both sides think that they’re doing the right thing, and it’s to Captain America: Civil War’s credit that they’re each right about 50% of the time. The irony that this film basically just exists to get costumed do-gooders to hit each other and is also playing at moral and ethical complexity gets a little lost here. But unlike the comparable superhero fight film Batman v Superman, this movie focuses more on the characters and less on their function in a nonsensical plot.

This movie isn’t about killing someone you don’t know, it’s about coming to blows with someone you do know, and that’s simply more involving. And even though the stories of both films are similar, Captain America: Civil War spends less time talking about its lofty concepts and more time on action, escalation and introducing new elements that please us, as opposed to just tease us.



http://www.heyuguys.com/review-captain-america-civil-war/
It is an incredible test of emotions for the viewer. These are all people we love who are attacking the other people we love. It is hard to imagine a similar moment in film where this was handled so eloquently and so well. Zack Snyder could have learned so much from every frame of this film.


http://variety.com/2016/film/reviews/captain-america-civil-war-review-1201752643/
Not every globe-trotting action movie is self-critical enough to acknowledge the many lives that are presumably lost when buildings blow up and cars flip over. And while the idea of collateral damage was certainly central to the conflict in “Batman v Superman,” that film ultimately banished any sense of ethical responsibility — and any lingering audience goodwill — with its bombastic and incoherent end-of-the-world climax. Whatever apocalyptic associations its title may generate, “Captain America: Civil War” turns out to be an infinitely smarter piece of multiplex mythmaking, blessed as it is with a new villain (played with unnerving subtlety by Daniel Bruhl) who has more on his mind than blowing human civilization to smithereens. And the sides-taking showdown between Team Captain America and Team Iron Man, far from numbing the viewer with still more callous acts of destruction, is likely to leave you admiring its creativity.



http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/04/13/captain-america-civil-war-makes-superhero-movies-great-again.html
Captain America: Civil War marks a watershed moment in the vaunted annals of comic book cinema: Finally, a big budget superhero sequel that manages to be both effortlessly entertaining and utterly sobering, instead of just one of those things—or, as we’ve endured too frequently in the past, neither of them. (Looking at you, Batman v Superman.)

It’s most unfortunate for Warner Bros. that, at its core, Civil War explores the same existential themes as Batman v Superman—only far better articulated, and with fewer mommy issues (spoiler: No Marthas die on the Avengers’ watch… that we know of). Instead of two lone superman-children trading blows in the rain, Civil War’s ensemble is made up of grown people wrestling with grown-people problems in the light of day, negotiating their conflicting worldviews in the name of living and working together.

Sure, it took Marvel 13 movies to express its most considered moral exploration of superhero figures as fallible agents of global security while at the same time delivering jokes about the bodily emissions of Spider-Man’s web-shooters and deliciously gratuitous moments of lingering Chris Evans biceps porn. And yes, Disney has 10 more tentpoles coming from the MCU in the next three years alone. WB and DC certainly have a great deal of catching up to do after their BvS box office disappointment, but every studio in the superhero game benefits from how well Civil War staves off the spandex fatigue—at least, for now.



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/film/captain-america--civil-war/review/
At the root of that is Civil War’s greatest strength – and the reason it makes all thought of the recent Batman v Superman debacle evaporate on contact. The Russos’ film has an unshakeable faith in these decades-old characters: they’re not wrangled into standing for anything other than who they are, with no gloss or reinterpretation or reach for epic significance required. This is the cinematic superhero showdown you’ve dreamt of since childhood, precisely because that’s everything – and all – it wants to be.


http://lwlies.com/reviews/captain-america-civil-war/
The film is also content with the fact that the external threat doesn’t have to be as big or as mean or as threatening as the internal one. The “Civil War” nomenclature isn’t a sell out (paging Batman V Superman!) as the film explores a rift that can’t be instantly healed with the diversion of a common foe. But what the film ends up being about isn’t a choice between democracy and fascism, but between having Marvel movies and not having Marvel movies. If these characters suddenly accept that they should be fully accountable for their actions, they are accepting that they no longer want to be superheroes, but bureaucrats. Captain America isn’t fighting for freedom – he’s fighting for the franchise. So #VoteCap.



http://www.cine-vue.com/2016/04/film-review-captain-america-civil-war.html
There are also some credible 'real-world' issues thrown in along the way by screenwriters Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeel. The problem then, perhaps, is that the Russo brothers - now locked in for two more Avengers: Infinity War sequels - insist on far too many samey Bourne-style chase-chat-fight scenes, padding out Civil War to a whopping two-and-a-half hours (including credits). There's a certain bloatedness to much of the first half, while the film in general lacks the balance of humour to hard-hitting found in Shane Black's superb Iron Man 3 and/or Whedon's two Avengers outings. Fortunately, unlike the abysmal Batman v Superman, Captain America: Civil War just about gets away with its flaws with through sheer swagger alone, in no doubt that it's the superhero showdown fans have so keenly awaited.


https://www.wow247.co.uk/2016/04/20/captain-america-civil-war-review/

Niggling plot issues aside, Civil War delivers everything you could possibly want from a movie about comic characters fighting each other. And puts a certain other superhero vs superhero movie to shame…




Captain America: Civil War isn’t just a great Marvel movie, it’s a great movie. And that greatness - which is dependant in part on the groundwork laid by 12 previous movies - is the final proof of the concept that Marvel Studios first tried out in Iron Man back in 2008. It’s the film that proves the shared universe concept isn’t just cool, and isn’t just a great marketing idea but that - when used right - it creates a kind of gripping, resonant longform storytelling that no one else has ever accomplished on this scale. Civil War isn’t great despite being the third Captain America and thirteenth overall Marvel movie - it’s great because of those things.

This is it - the peak of the superhero movie shared universe. Captain America: Civil War is a tight action thriller that works on its own, but when taken as the latest chapter in an unprecedented experiment in longform storytelling it’s a brilliant chapter, one that makes everything that went before seem better if only because it was all leading to this pinnacle.



EDIT#1-More Reviews came out, More Mocking Of BvS, lol-

http://www.timeout.com/london/film/captain-america-civil-war
Does any of this sound familiar? Two iconic heroes duking it out over two-and-a-half epic hours… Angsty agonising over the collateral damage that ensues… Cameos from multiple costumed crusaders, just to make sure we’re suitably hyped for the next ten movies. But luckily, ‘Captain America: Civil War’ is packed to bursting with the one ingredient its rival superhero smackdown ‘Batman v Superman’ lacked: joy.


Which isn’t to say ‘Civil War’ is threat-free and happy-clappy. This is a film about the violent end of a friendship and the moral questions that come with free will, so it’s hardly a party. No, this is the kind of joy that comes with crafting characters people can relate to, with designing action scenes that spring and spin and bound off the screen, with picking just the right moment for a tension-breaking gag, a pause for reflection or a rousing speech. It's the joy of making a movie for and about people.



http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/film/2016/04/captain-america-s-latest-outing-antidote-batman-v-superman-s-poison-comic-fans
Captain America’s latest outing is the antidote to Batman v Superman’s poison for comic fans

The catastrophe earlier this year of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice seemed to bode ill for the state of comic book movies, as well as putting the mockers on further accounts of inter-superhero discord.

After the poison, though, comes the antidote. Or Captain America: Civil War, as we shall call it. Take one before bedtime and the outlook will be brighter by morning.


The plot is so satisfyingly worked out, and the foundations for the hostilities in the second half of the film so carefully prepared, that you want to take aside the makers of Batman v Superman (who thought it was motivation enough just to have one superhero mistakenly believe that the other was running amok) and say to them: See? This is how it’s done. It’s not so hard, is it?

It helps also that there is nuance and colour here. The characters are multi-layered, crammed full of old allegiances and grudges and irritations. They have personalities. Remember those?


http://www.scifinow.co.uk/reviews/captain-america-civil-war-film-review-marvel-superheroes-fight-for-their-rights/
The pressure on Captain America: Civil War lessened a little when it turned out that its main competition, Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice, really wasn’t that great. But even before that, if Marvel was at all worried then it needn’t have been.


http://www.accesshollywood.com/articles/captain-america-civil-war-review-caught-between-iron-man-and-hard-place/
While the prospect of costumed heroes being held accountable for their actions was recently depicted to a rather underwhelming effect in the disappointing DC offering “Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice,” there’s no question that the results are more effective in “Civil War.” That’s because returning screenwriters Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely depict both sides with equal measure, which increases the stakes of their gripping moral dilemma.


http://www.starburstmagazine.com/reviews/latest-reviews-of-movies/14929-captain-america-civil-war-review
Somewhere in the middle of the molten mess which was Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice, released to almost universal derision a couple of months ago, was the potentially-intriguing notion of superhero accountability; who’s to blame when the death toll rises and the buildings start to fall and who’s powerful enough to reign in this new breed of heroes and impose a form of governance upon people with extraordinary, terrifying abilities? BvS fudged the question horribly, of course, disintegrating into mindless fisticuffs between two rather boring men in capes who eventually (and metaphorically) decided to kiss and make up and become best friends forever when they discovered their mothers had the same name. Trust the mighty Marvel Cinematic Universe to run with broadly the same idea in Captain America: Civil War, the first title in a brave and bold third phase of feature films and trust Marvel to, yet again, show their shabby rivals a clean pair of heels. By any standards, Civil War is an extraordinary film; richly-populated, densely-plotted and packed with nods and references to almost all those MCU films which have gone before, topped off with some barnstorming cameos, the odd surprise (we won’t spoil it for you) and, when you least expect it, some moments of genuine pathos and emotional heft. This is a film which is, in many ways, the pay-off to a run of films which began with Iron Man in 2008 and fans will be rewarded with a movie which revels in a fictional universe intricately and carefully nurtured ever since and it does it because it’s earned it; the film knows that its audience will appreciate its kisses to the past because, by and large, the audience has been with these movies each and every step of the way.



leemall-"Paul Walkers Death Had Zero Impact On F7's Hype And Box Office Results"

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LOL I didn't think that many critics would compare Civil War to BvS, even though it came out barely a month before. It seems almost obvious that Civil War would be better, since that's not saying much. Batman v Superman was pure excrement, and one of the most insufferable comic book movies I've ever sat through. I figured they'd compare it more to the better Marvel films like Avengers or Captain America: Winter Soldier.

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and just added this one because Its basically saying "This how you make A VS Type movie"

The Audience actually cares for these characters, 12 Movies have perfectly built to this one film...

the exact opposite of WB/DC's horrifically failed Idea of BvS...

There is no better example Of 2 Studios having The same Idea/concept, and 1 Studio(Disney/Marvel) Literally knocking it out of the park and Planning and Executing it Perfectly resulting In A Great Film and The Other Studio(WB/DC) failing at every possible level resulting in A Awful Movie

** I also want to Specifically say This Post Is meant For "Hardcore DC Fans"...I'm well a where most DC fans didn't do the things I said In this post, Or dont have The same mindset...

This Post is meant for The Hardcore DC fans that have gone to extremes....

This Post wont actually bother Most DC fans, Most DC fans aren't Hardcore DC fans that have been on a 3 year crusade trying to prove BvS is going to be the Greatest CBM and is Going to Destroy Civil War, MOST DC fans dont resort extreme/desperate measures like "Its clear Marvel/Disney Paid Off Critics to Hate BvS"

This Thread is meant for Hardcore DC Fans, and Will Kill Hardcore DC fans, you dont spend the time They spent saying Trashing Civil War, Guaranteeing BvS is going to destroy Civil War everyday for 3 years and then see Undeniable proof like this that "Civil War Won, Civil War is The better movie" and It not KILL YOU...

You dont read Dozen Of Reviews of Critics literally mocking BvS and Then In the same sentence Praising Marvel and Civil War for doing in Better Without it absolutely killing you...

and that was the goal, This thread was made to Bother Hardcore DC fans...But Just "Hardcore DC fans"

This may be meant for the mindless fanboy trolls who mocked Marvel every chance they got, but either way, whether you hate those fanboys or not (I am also annoyed by them and their stupidity), BvS's massive failure is NO LAUGHING MATTER AT ALL. I don't care how stupid the dumb fanboys were - this was a movie that had no right to be bad.

This kind of stuff - the fact that reviews are praising Civil War while trashing BvS is something worthy of lamenting, not laughing - because who, other than trolls, WANTED BvS to be bad?

All this does is remind people how BvS, whether you liked it or not managed to miss its mark so horribly. And for those of us who have wanted to see Batman and Superman on screen together for as long as we can remember, that genuinely feels like a rock was dropped on our heads.

So stop reveling in it for the sake of trolls. Stooping to their level just makes you look like an a$$hole.

How does it feel to be deconstructed?

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This may be meant for the mindless fanboy trolls who mocked Marvel every chance they got, but either way, whether you hate those fanboys or not (I am also annoyed by them and their stupidity), BvS's massive failure is NO LAUGHING MATTER AT ALL. I don't care how stupid the dumb fanboys were - this was a movie that had no right to be bad.

This kind of stuff - the fact that reviews are praising Civil War while trashing BvS is something worthy of lamenting, not laughing - because who, other than trolls, WANTED BvS to be bad?

All this does is remind people how BvS, whether you liked it or not managed to miss its mark so horribly. And for those of us who have wanted to see Batman and Superman on screen together for as long as we can remember, that genuinely feels like a rock was dropped on our heads.

So stop reveling in it for the sake of trolls. Stooping to their level just makes you look like an a$$hole.


I actually feel the same way you do, I wanted BvS to be Great, But it was truly worse than I or anyone could have imagined...and I am choosing to get angry over that instead of live in A fantasy world...

I would not make this thread or any other thread rubbing it in about how awful this movie was if Hardcore DC fans simply excepted the truth, If they just admitted BvS failed and WB simply screwed up ...

Instead They literally want to live in a fantasy world where Impossible conspiracy theories actually taking place, They'd rather believe "BvS isn't really bad, It didn't really get bad reviews nope, Marvel/Disney just paid off critics to Hate BvS"

I'd have no problem if DC fans simply said "Look I get it, BvS got bad reviews, But I loved It"

I'd have no problem if DC fans simply said "I dont understand why BvS got Bad reviews, IMO Its great"

DC fans have every right to love and enjoy this movie, and I or anyone else has no right to tell them their opinions are wrong...

but thats not what they are doing, They are actually saying "Everybody is wrong, BvS isn't bad, The reviews Dont matter, There is a Smear Campaign going against BvS"

They are actually trying to say "BvS is a Great Movie and Would have gotten Great reviews if Marvel/Disney didn't pay off critics"

lol that kind of attitude does no one any good especially the DCU...

at this point, when you fail as badly as WB/DC and Snyder did With BvS, The last thing on earth that needs to be done is "Relentlessly defending this movie,Snyder and WB/DC"

People need to get angry and demand something better, demand a change...These hardcore DC fans are Literally Killing themselves and The Future Movies they are looking forward to...

So I disagree, I dont feel like I'm stooping to "Their level"...I feel like I'm rising way above their level...

I feel like I'm actually helping by getting angry instead of "relentlessly defending a universally hated film that turned out worse than anyone could have ever imagined"....I feel like making threads like this, and saying the truth instead of Living in A fantasy world where "Critics where Paid off" is A much better reality.

the facts are, These DC fans aren't simply stating their opinion that "They enjoyed the movie"....They are Literally coming up with Impossible conspiracy theories in an attempt to somehow render every single piece of data that Points to BvS being an Awful movie "Wrong"

they are literally trying to say "No I dont care about reviews, ratings, scores,polls,box office, I dont care about any of that...none of it can be trusted, BvS Is a great movie and that is what EVERYONE Believes"

Those Hardcore DC fans who do that, Literally deserve this post, they deserve to be punished.

They aren't fans not anymore, they are obsessed...at this point for them, Its no longer about if the movie is actually good or not...they dont care, at this point it bothers them so much that BvS got Bad reviews,had a bad box office run and Is perceived as A failure, that they will go to any measures NOT TO EXCEPT it

seriously these people are no longer fans, They no longer get joy from watching Their favorite heroes on screen...This has turned to Obsession, They can not handle what happened with BvS...and at this point, nothing matter but NOT EXCEPTING THE TRUTH...they truly dont care that the movie was bad, they dont care about future DC movies being Good...the only thing that Matters to them at this point is....DC Wins...Marvel Loses...and they'll go to any measures to try and do it including Living in a fantasy world where impossible conspiracy theories are taking place


Basically Threads like these need to be made, It needs to be pointed out Just how badly WB/DC failed, It needs to be pointed out That BOTH Marvel Studios and WB/DC made the same type of Movie, With The same Hero Vs Hero Concept, and 1 Studio(Marvel) Literally Knocked it out of the park and 1 Studio(DC) Literally made 1 of the worst CBM's ever, It needs to be pointed It wasn't Hard or Impossible for BvS to be Good or Great, thats clear by Marvel Studios completely nailing with The same Concept and Movie in Civil War...

These threads need to overshadow The Obsessed Hardcore DC fans defending BvS...There needs to be A Narrative of Disappointment and Angry NOT "Relentless Defending of An Awful movie"

leemall-"Paul Walkers Death Had Zero Impact On F7's Hype And Box Office Results"

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You're not "getting mad." You're LAUGHING. And you're LAUGHING that Marvel is beating up DC again. Granted, the blind fanboys who say stuff like "Marvel paid critics" and whatnot are stupid idiots, but most other fans who defended BvS and MOS before BvS came out really truly wanted it to be good and it was genuinely disappointing. To those people, that really sucks... Because personally, as much as I love the Marvel movies, I love the DC universe far more. Superman IMO is ten billion times more interesting and awesome than any of the Marvel characters. It not only makes me ANGRY that he's getting mistreated in films, it makes me sad. It makes me sad that the first and best superhero ever created can't catch a break... It makes me angry that the best superhero ever can't get a genuinely well-liked movie. It makes me enraged that the best superhero ever is handed to misguided or downright dumb filmmakers who simply just don't GET what makes the character tick.

I don't laugh at that - I boil with frustration at that.

Even some of the die-hards who defended the movie feverishly like DennisReynolds have expressed genuine disappointment - and that's not funny. If even someone who was as stubborn and set in his ways as that came away from BvS crushed and disappointed, then something went horribly wrong - and that's NO LAUGHING MANNER.

So yes, I do believe you're stooping to the idiotic DC fanboys (I don't even think they're DC fans - if they were, they would be fuming with rage that DC properties are being treated so disrespectfully) level - because essentially you're just fuming flames and trying to act nasty. In doing so, you not only piss off the blinded DC fanboys - you piss off those who desperately wanted BvS to be good and came away disappointed.

If that's your intent, congrats. But if your intent was to just laugh in the face of a specific target, then your aim landed in the middle and hit nobody.

In fact, the DC fanboys who blindly act like BvS was perfect and not a box office and critical failure shouldn't be laughed at and mocked, but pitied. They're in the biggest denial stage ever, but in a sense, who can blame them? This is ALL they have and for what it is, it's definitely not much. Marvel's dignity doesn't need to be defended by laughing at the losers - Marvel's dignity will last until they actually make a bad movie (which doesn't look like it'll happen any time soon - and fantastic for them and us for that).

DC'S? Not so much.

How does it feel to be deconstructed?

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This is greatlu needed!

"Save me Batman, please, save me" WB and MOS

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BvS was great movie, I really enjoyed it but carry on..

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No, you are not!

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Nice work, I applaud you.

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The fact that you had time to post this makes me feel sorry for you.


One day you will have a friend

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Hey what's this MARTHA thing about?

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don't exaggerate. its not the worst cbm ever.. you are either completely clueless or just a fanboy who doesn't accept anything outside marvel universe even if its well made or at least ok like this film. lets be honest here lol. batman v superman is an ok movie and did great boxoffice wise. stop exaggerating you stuck up fanboy

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did great boxoffice wise


Yeah, right! 

"Save me Batman, please, save me" WB and MOS

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yes. borderline 900m is still good if you dont compare to the avengers films. avengers = justice league.

cap 2, guardians did just 700 and yet they are considered massive success. most harry potter movies, hobbits, transformers, and pirrates are aroun 700-1.2b and they are considered to be great financial success box office wise. since when 880-920m not a great statistics in the boxoffice?

if this movie made less than 700 then it will be a dissapointment but still a slight success.

if this movie made less than 500 then its a complete flop.

made 800 its good.

900m above great!

1b-1.2b it is a massive success.

1.5 it would be legendary.

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if this movie made less than 700 then it will be a dissapointment but still a slight success.

if this movie made less than 500 then its a complete flop.

made 800 its good.

900m above great!

1b-1.2b it is a massive success.

1.5 it would be legendary.


So, I reckon you give us all this magnificent information as an official spokesman of the WB Executive Board. One question, then. When they gave you this information, didn't they give you also the Excel Graphics? Maybe if you show us those, you will make your points more clear.

Or, do we have to believe this imaginary data because it's yours.

"Save me Batman, please, save me" WB and MOS

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BECAUSE JUST USE YOUR MIND AND SEE THE OBVIOUS AND DONT COMPARE THe avengers films.

yes. borderline 900m is still great if you don't compare it to the avengers films. avengers = justice league.

cap 2, guardians did just 700 and yet they are considered massive success. most harry potter movies, hobbits, transformers, and pirrates are aroun 700-1.2b and they are considered to be great financial success box office wise. since when 880-920m not a great statistics in the boxoffice?

even 700m is a big success already to most movie!!!!!! even 500m is a legit score. movies like Cinderella, malificents are consider huge sucess at just 500m and 600m respectively.

even movies that only gets like 374m like cap1 is already OK, and they make sequels out of it. just like snow white and the huntsman and so on.

so borderline 900m is a fail to you? use common sense. so its not consider a great number? considering most movie won't even crack 500m. go to john carter board you are better suited there with your clueless and bias mind about the avengers numbers. batvsuperman is not justice league. and even if justice league makes only around 1-1.2b and although lower than the avenger movie, it is still a huge success from the gross amount alone by itself. you don't have to compare dc movies to avenger movie in terms of numbers just like all other movie, just look at the actualy boxoffice numbers that's what matter and disregarding what the avenger made, because its not like all movies now need to top and beat the avenger 1 numbers. deadpool, cap2, guardians movie at only around 700m and they did great box office wise, why is 900m not great?

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if justice league makes only around 1-1.2b


Fearless Prediction: There are no ifs and buts about it, Justice League with Synder at the helm will not come close to the billion mark.

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Bill you still bitching about dc in imdb boards,i thought you had something better to do,get a life dude,i mean srsly,

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