Author Topic: Why do people like Captain America: The First Avenger so much?  (Read 4275 times)

However, Captain America had it's badass moments, and all the other moments were spent as story builders. The first part shows how Steve is this perfect American patriot guy who was cool guy and not afraid of anything. Then the next part sets up that that guy who believed in him gets shot as well as so there can't be any more super soldiers and thus making Steve the last hope. The next parts are dumb comic relief that do little really but set up his costume, *and finally it shows just how badass he is by going in to save all those people, becoming a solider for realsies, and eventually being the ultimate awesome by sacrificing himself for the good of his country. It's a very basic tale of the Hero's Journey, yadda yadda yadda.

There wasn't much story building going on. They only built up a story of Captain America and that lame tacked on love interest. His best friend, his squad and RedSkull had a very little story.

What I noticed is that the fight scene montage was just a way to make the Captain America trailer look good. They used clips from the montage and spliced it in with other clips in the trailer to make the movie seem more appealing but in reality the montage was really dull. The trailer was more exciting.

When Captain America set up his own squad the members themselves seem like interesting guys but they don't get enough screen time and their characters don't have enough depth put into them.

During the train and Captain America's best friend falls to his death I didn't feel anything for his death because they never fully developed that character.


*Yeah about him becoming a badass and saving all those people. He only saved those people because he was certain that his best friend was captured. After when he gets to the jail cells he unlocks the doors and expects unarmed prisoners to fight against national socialists with high powered energy weapons (somehow the national socialists lost to unarmed prisoners but that's besides the point) then Captain America runs off and rescues his best friend.

I thought there wasn't enough gun shooting.

It needed more Tommy and Shotgun action. And the Red skull wasn't a very believable character.

All in all, it was about America, and a little man named Captain. AMERICA YEAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

It needed more Tommy and Shotgun action. And the Red skull wasn't a very believable character.

Exactly, here is his character in a nutshell.

HAIL HYDRA!
*rips off mask
I HAVE POWERS!
I AM SUPER STRONG!
I DIE INCREDIBLY EASY!

k guis. new hero.
captai-
*everyone walks out*
NO. DUN WALK OUT.
uhhhh uhhh
AMERICA
*everyone floods back in*

I liked the movie because it showed that not all superheros start off with powers or extra talents.

he was just an average joe,

and it was gifted apon he.

I liked the part where he jumped on the fake grenade. That sold me.


And the flag pole part.

also his second uniform was so gay

i liked the makeshift one better

Remember Adam West's Batman? There was a time when that was actually pretty damn faithful to the original Batman comics.
Good god I loved that movie. The Brave and the Bold cartoon seems pretty faithful too, it definitely reminds me of the Adam West portrayal.
Yeah I guess the new movies are more "badass", but I miss when comics were campy and fun.

Besides, if I wanted to watch a grimdark Batman movie I'd watch Under the Red Hood. In my opinion, John DiMaggio's Joker was even better than Heath Ledger.

I liked the movie because it showed that not all superheros start off with powers or extra talents.

he was just an average joe,

and it was gifted apon he.

Spiderman did that too except Spiderman did it 100x better. With less awkward fondue dialog moments.
« Last Edit: November 04, 2011, 11:17:30 AM by Lørd Tøny »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ojy62sIhtl0
Also, I can't believe they are remaking spiderman 1 after the 3 something movies that came out after the original. I thought they were pretty good but some parts could use some work.

Well yeah. Didn't say it was a great story.

Basically, yeah, that movie was just to show Captain America being sort of Captain America and then lead up to the Avengers film. Nothing more than a glorified trailer.

Well yeah. Didn't say it was a great story.

Basically, yeah, that movie was just to show Captain America being sort of Captain America and then lead up to the Avengers film. Nothing more than a glorified trailer.

Exactly it's basically a slapped together two hour trailer for that Avengers film. I still don't understand why people find it to be the best super hero film to date.

Oh, I would never hail it as the best to date.

Iron Man comes close cause it's pretty loving awesome. Batman maybe, though to be honest I'd rather go with the Tim Burton films (specifically Batman Returns) as the greatest super hero movie ever rather than the Nolan films. I know a lot of Dark Knight fanboys are going to eat me up (or out, rawr) over that, and they are very well made films, but they just don't feel like Batman Batman. They're Batman, for sure, but it's that ultra-real that I'm not too huge a fan of.

And sure, people are gonna say that that made it 'betterer' because it was more 'irl', but that's not where Batman started. To me, Batman Returns glorified the Batman mythos onscreen and made the characters the center of the action (much like Dark Knight did) but added that suspension of disbelief. That nonspeaking character that was Gotham City played a pivotal role in the film and not only added atmosphere, but it also added depth. It felt that the pages were onscreen and captivated the audience with breathtaking scenery as well as deep, Batman-ness stories.

Dark Knight was in Chicago. Bland, clean, everyday Chicago. Batman feels more like Commando in a Batsuit rather than Super Hero.

Where Dark Knight may have shined in its character driven stories, Returns did that and added an element of otherworldly quality that makes Batman Batman. And then obviously Schumacher took a huge stuff all over Batman and so two movies later Begins and Dark Knight were fresh and fantastic new films that really put Batman back on the market.

Each film is fantastic, but in my opinion Returns wins the day.

I've always found Batman to be reminding of this stupid show I watched as a kid. Batman is cool and all but if I think too hard about it awful memories of THIS GUY shows up in my head.

Eat your eyes out

I... remember... that... show!!!

Oh my god (pun intended), it was awful!

See, here in my part of Ohio, Time Warner Cable carried that religious network. I never ever watched it on my own time, but lo and behold as to what channel it was on.

Everyone remember back to when in order to play video games, you had to put your TV on channel 3 (sometimes 4, usually default 3) in order for the system to show up on the screen? That religious channel was on 3.

So I'd catch glimpses all the time of "God friendly" programming, usually cable access quality, and sometimes syndicated crap like Bibleman.

It was almost so bad, it was good. Almost. But no, it was just bad. Very, very, very bad.

I feel compelled to download episodes now just to do a "Nostalgia Critic" type review of it in case you've never seen nor heard of this show.