Sherlock
Holmes proved a decent success for Warner Brothers, so naturally a sequel was
inevitable, it was fast-tracked by the studio and was released in 2011. It was
about as successful as the first one commercially but there was a slight drop
in critical response, with a 60% rating on Rotten Tomatoes compared to the 70
the first one got? Where did this one go wrong? Did it go wrong? Here’s my take:
Tuesday, 30 April 2019
RageLite review - Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
The game
evolves for Sherlock Holmes as he plays the Game of Shadows
Sunday, 28 April 2019
Young Adult Month: The Divergent Series: Allegiant
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise
Roll call:
Hunger Games
Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and think about it no more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
We come to
the end of the road for the Divergent series: The Divergent Series: Allegiant
The
Divergent movies had never been box office smashes, which makes the move of
increasing their budget with each release perplexing to say the least, but here
we are, Allegiant had a $140m budget at its disposal, given the box office
returns of the other 2 films, it would struggle to break even if it matched
them, and it didn’t. The film earned $170m at the box office, resulting in a
net loss and the planned follow-up instalment to be tossed in the garbage. I
know there were talks of TV movies and mini-series but the actors involved in
the films didn’t care and these ideas have largely been scrapped now.
Here’s the
weird thing though, usually when it comes to making a 2-part movie adaptation,
you film them back-to-back with a joint budget to save costs then release them
about a year apart to allow for editing. This movie wasn’t released like that,
and you might argue there’s a reason for it. Anyway, the film was critically
panned with a dismal 12% Rotten Tomatoes Rating with an average critical score
of 4.1/10, audiences too seem to have had enough, giving it only a 41% audience
score with an average of 3/5
I know I’ve
been pretty detailed in my synopses anyway for this series, but again, major
spoilers for both film and book, as I’ll try and summarise both.
Labels:
Abnegation,
Allegiant,
Amity,
Caleb Prior,
Candor,
Christina,
Dauntless,
Divergent,
Erudite,
Evelyn,
Four,
Peter Hayes,
The Divergent Series: Allegiant,
Tris Prior,
Young Adult Month
Friday, 26 April 2019
Young Adult Month - The Divergent Series: Insurgent
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was special
for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise
Roll call:
Hunger Games
Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and think about it no more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
Yay, we’re
continuing with Divergent movies. I suppose I made it clear during the last
one, but I’ll reiterate. The Divergent books are overlong and bloated with
character choices that don’t make any sense. The plot rips off tropes from
other, better books, and there’s nothing in this series that isn’t done better
somewhere else. That said, the plot of the books is fairly solid and when they get the characters right, they get it right, the dialogue is another thing entirely.
But enough
about that, this is the Divergent Series: Insurgent
Pre-production
for this film had begun before the first film was even out, which allowed it to
release only a year later. This implies Entertainment One clearly had
confidence in the success of the first one, confidence that was rewarded to an
extent with Box Office Receipts. The director of the first film was still
working on that film, so it was announced the new director would be Robert
Schwentke, the director of R.I.P.D. (oh god, that’s not good), who went on to
produce Allegiant as well (great…) With a larger budget of $110 million to work
with, the film was absolutely blasted by critics, gathering a meagre 28% rating
on Rotten Tomatoes with an 5/10 average score, and an audience rating of 58%
with an average 3.5/5, it earned slightly more at the box office with $297.3m,
but compared to the other two franchises, Hunger Games’ sequel made more than
double that with only a slightly larger budget. The Scorch Trials made slightly
more but on about half the budget. But to business, what is this film really
like?
Labels:
Abnegation,
Amity,
Caleb Prior,
Candor,
Christina,
Dauntless,
Divergent,
Erudite,
Four,
Insurgent,
Jeanine Matthews,
Peter Hayes,
The Divergent Series: Insurgent,
Tris Prior,
Young Adult Month
Sunday, 21 April 2019
Young Adult Month - Divergent
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise
Roll call
Hunger Games
Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
We’re
apparently going in order of success as we enter the Divergent series
Divergent
had 4 movies planned, but the 4th movie was ultimately scrapped
after the 3rd one failed to deliver at the box office. I wish I
could say I was disappointed but having read the books, all I have to say is
that they are so f*cking boring!
Released in
2014, the movie made $288m on an $85m budget, making it less successful than
the least successful Maze Runner movie. It’s not great news on the critical
front either, with a 42% Rotten Tomatoes rating with an average score 5.4/10,
but it did have an impact with audiences, with a 69% rating and 3.8/5 average
score.
Thursday, 18 April 2019
#2 - Batman: Arkham Origins (Reupload)
Not sure how this review ended up deleted but here's a reupload of it
Before I
start, I want to clarify. Batman Arkham Origins is not a bad game, per-say. But
in my honest opinion it’s an ok-good game that exists in a franchise where
that’s not good enough.
A little
background: games starring superheroes is a not a new franchise but until the
Arkham games came out, none of them really felt right. From Superman getting
easily beaten by basic weapons, to team games where everyone loses health every
time they take a hit. Not to mention the complicated systems of combos and
super-moves. There have been a few Batman games in the past, including a Batman
Begins game and several based on Batman: The animated series. None of them felt
quite right, partially being restricted by their respective franchise
Out of the
shadows came Batman: Arkham Asylum. Boasting the writing talents of Paul Dini
(writer of the award-winning Batman: The Animated Series episode Heart of Ice)
and the voice actors Kevin Conroy, Mark Hamill and Arleen Sorkin, all veterans
from Batman: The Animated series. Unlike
that said series. This was a much darker story, featuring the Joker committing
on screen murder, dead bodies at every turn, and a far more gritty
surroundings.
It was a
huge success, it took (an element I hate in many games) and made it exciting,
it took strategy, but not so much that it was highly complicated, and the
surroundings were beautiful. Obviously a sequel was planned: Batman: Arkham
City. Batman: Arkham City took everything that made Asylum great, tweaked it by
adding new moves, gadgets and the like, and put onto an open world environment.
The story, still penned (at least in part) by Paul Dini, and with return of
most voice actors (with Tara Strong doing a good stand-in for Arleen Sorkin,
and Mark Hamill reprising the Joker for what he said would be the last time, it wasn't the last time)
Arkham City expanded on the roots of Arkham Asylum in all the right ways. It
still looked lovely, was packed with references, and the story, while somewhat
cluttered was a good one.
Lots of
rumours had been going around as to what the third iteration of the Arkham
franchise would be, with rumours of have a silver age backdrop and including
heroes like Superman. In 2013 we received news that a new Batman: Arkham game
would be released that year. Later, to many people’s disappointment, it was
discovered that Rocksteady, who were the developers of Arkham Asylum and Arkham
City, would not be working on it (as they were still in the process of creating
Batman: Arkham Knight) instead, the task fell to Warner
Bros. Montreal, who did the Wii U adaptation of Arkham City. Furthering the
disappointing news was the fact that they’d chosen a voice actor for Batman who
wasn’t Kevin Conroy. Also of note was that Paul Dini was not working on the
story for this game. Batman Arkham Origins would serve as a prequel, detailing
the origins of key relationships in Batman’s mythos.
OK, that was
a lot of backstory, so on with the review. Spoilers ahead
Tuesday, 16 April 2019
Young Adult Month - Maze Runner: The Death Cure
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
An angry guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise
Roll call
The Hunger Games
The Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
So we finish
the Maze Runner Trilogy with the Death Cure
2018 was a
tough year for YA movies, 4 of them released (if you count A Wrinkle in Time,
which your mileage may vary on) and 3 of them were flops, I’ll be covering all
3 of the others later this year, but for now, we look at the conclusion to the
Maze Runner trilogy.
Whilst this
film was successful, it did hit some production issues, including Dylan O’Brien
being injured during a stunt and having to take a year off filming, delaying
the film. The film hit diminishing returns upon release, whilst still
successful, it made only $288m on its $65m budget. If there’s one thing Fox
should be given credit for, it’s management on their budget. Overblown budgets
on relative unknowns leading to financial flops are sinking films and I hope
after the Disney merger, Disney still allows these mid-budget flicks to get
produced. Critically, this film managed 42% on Rotten Tomatoes with an average
5.1/10, only a slight drop from the last but significant enough. The audience
score is weirdly better at 60% with an average 3.5/5 score
Labels:
Alby,
Alva,
Ava Paige,
Brenda,
Frypan,
Gally,
Jorge,
Minho,
Newt,
Teresa,
The Maze Runner,
Tommy,
WCKD,
Young Adult Month
Monday, 15 April 2019
Young Adult Month - Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
An angry guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise Roll call:
The Hunger Games
The Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to yourself, it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
OK, here’s
where all bets are off, welcome to Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials. The
funny thing is there’s not a lot of change when it comes to production, Wes
Ball is still directing and the writer was… one of the writers for the first
one (T S Nowlin, who may or not have been involved with Fant4stic, but his track record isn't great regardless) There was definite room for improvement, especially when it came to the
writing but they were off to a decent start
And this
film was given a larger budget to work with, $61m which means it can be a bit
more ambitious. The film was successful, making $312m, but the critical
reception, whilst poor to start with gets worse with each instalment, this one
manages a disappointing 46% with an average 5.4/10, and a 54% audience score
averaging 3.4/5
Labels:
Alby,
Alva,
Ava Paige,
Brenda,
Cranks,
Frypan,
Jorge,
Minho,
Newt,
Teresa,
The Maze Runner,
Tommy,
WCKD,
Young Adult Month
Wednesday, 10 April 2019
Young Adult Month - The Maze Runner
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise Roll call:
The Hunger Games
The Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
Because I’ve
made a conscious choice to read the books from this point on, I’ve decided to
change the order. The Maze Runner was a series of 3 books (I’m excluding the
prequel books since they weren’t adapted) written by James Dashner and released
between 2009 and 2011, and it’s Fox throwing their hand into the YA ring with
the adaption of this franchise.
And it’s off
to a mixed start, but with a silver lining of making over $300m on a $35m
budget. Critically though, it holds a 65% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, which just
barely qualifies as fresh, with an average score of a meagre 5.9/10, it holds a
similar audience rating of 68%, though with a higher 3.7/5 average. These would
be the highest scores this franchise gets so let’s take a look.
Labels:
Alby,
Alva,
Ava Paige,
Ben,
Chuck,
Frypan,
Gally,
Griever,
Jansen,
Jeff,
Newt,
Teresa,
The Maze Runner,
Tommy,
WCKD,
Young Adult Month
Sunday, 7 April 2019
Young Adult Month - The Hunger Games: Mockingjay part 2
In the not too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise Roll call:
The Hunger Games
The Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to
yourself, it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
Part 2 of
Mockingjay was the least successful Hunger Games movie, earning $650m on it’s
$160m budget. You could argue this was a souring towards YA movies in general,
as both of the next franchises would see diminishing returns towards the end of
their run, but it could also be the problem of splitting this book into 2 parts.
The critical
reception was only slightly improved with a 70% Rotten Tomatoes rating with an
average 6.5/10, the audience score went down to 66%, with an average 3.6/5.
Tuesday, 2 April 2019
Young Adult Month - The Hunger Games: Mockingjay part 1
In the not
too distant future, after a disaster takes place
A nerdy guy
with Rage Issues, among the last of the human race
He was just
a media nerd, he ranted a lot, it was quite absurd
But he was
special for some reason, so bad men decided it was Rage Issues season
He’ll star
in 3 movies, 4 if we squeeze him dry
He’ll go and
join a rebel force, as he’ll slowly lose his mind
Now keep in
mind, he’s just a guy, no different from you or me
So, he’ll
have to learn how to survive, with the help of YA Movies
Franchise Roll call:
The Hunger Games
The Maze Runner
Diiiiiiiivergent
If you’re
wondering how he posts his thoughts, and who he’s posting for
Repeat to yourself,
it’s just a theme, and stop thinking any more
It’s Young
Adult Month!
And we’re
back with the Hunger games with Mockingjay part 1
With the
success of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows being split into 2 movies, it
was decided to do the same thing with Mockingjay. The thing is Harry Potter and
the Deathly Hallows is a much longer book and it needed to catch up with
details omitted from previous very long books. Hunger Games: Mockingjay is a
medium sized book, and the previous films had been largely pretty good at not
omitting major details from the book (going from the Dom’s Lost in Adaptation
here)
So, it’s not
difficult to see this move as a major cash-grab on the part of the studio. The
difficulty comes in altering the structure of the story to fit this. I will
admit that my thoughts on this have been changed slightly. Unlike the other 2
books, I have read Mockingjay, I happened to stumble across it relatively cheap
so I do know where these films branch off from the books.
Still, the
success was felt, the film earned over $750m at the box office on a $140m
budget (a notable downgrade from Catching fire but still) but took a hit
critically with now a 68% Rotten Tomatoes rating with an average 6.3/10 score
and a 71% audience rating with an average 3.8/5 score. What does that mean for the film itself? Here is my take.
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