Why did Ghostbusters resonate so much with the nerd community to where the movie became this holy grail of geek entertainment? Did it appeal to the mainstream?
When you've baked as much fucking cake as I have in this thread and so many people are just strolling by the beautiful towering bastards without even so much as running a finger along the frosting fuck yes I'm going to serve myself a slice with a smile and have fun with the inherent ridiculousness in a minority of posters here suddenly finding their long lost ability to clutch at pearls and catch the vapors after two-years worth of non-stop hostility and acrimony the second it's aimed at a guy who likes Ghostbusters a lot.
Guess what: I also like Ghostbusters a lot. I might even argue I like it more than most of you here in this thread.
Not that it actually matters how much I like it. Because it doesn't. It really doesn't factor in at all. Nor should it with Rolfe. His liking Ghostbusters a lot isn't really a great justification for his grandstanding bullshit, for reasons I've explained, very thoroughly, prior to this. It's not great justification for much of anything.
People being mean to him on twitter, going after his wife and kids, that's just as out of bounds as people being mean to Feig, McCarthy, Jones on twitter. People going out of their way to mean-spiritedly bring up his personal life or his appearance are just as shitty as people going out of their way to cack on McCarthy or Jones' size.
What's notable to me is that it's been two years worth of people very painstakingly going out of their way to make sure everyone looking understands that sexism is just a ghost (hah!) people are jumping at so as to make excuses for why people don't like the shitty marketing on display. They have had little-to-no problem with the sustained levels of nastiness, and have had even less problem minimizing it, and have seemed to thoroughly enjoy pretending they're being somehow persecuted for daring to be lone voices of reason demonized for nothing more than daring to be a guy who has a keen eye for cinematic quality.
And a small number of these same men are now (gasp! shock!) freaked out and utterly dismayed at the "sheer vitriol" being expended towards The Angry Video Game Nerd for his God-Given right to express his opinion honestly and even-handedly.
So again: What we seem to be dealing with here are a group of men who are very insecure about both their opinions, their regard for their childhood, and also (maybe primarily) the possibility they might be labeled as a sexist on the internet, and have decided the best way to counter that insecurity is to attempt to minimize (if not flat-out erase) the possiblity that sexism has anything to do with anything.
This is the double-decker cake that keeps getting wheeled in the way of fairly basic conversation about this film's marketing campaign
Which is, by the way, not great, could possibly point towards Paul Feig fucking the dog on this film, and wasting the talents of his cast and crew in a misguided attempt at modernizing both the tone and humor of Ghostbusters.
Note that I can say that confidently, without ever once having to suggest or even nod to the idea someone might think I'm sexist for saying that. I can dislike the marketing without prefacing that with any sort of worry about how people I don't know may percieve me on the internet, because I'm not at all insecure about my ability to explain my opinions, my standpoints, and am confident my reasoning will hold up when asked for it.
Insecurity is a motherfucker.
Guess what: I also like Ghostbusters a lot. I might even argue I like it more than most of you here in this thread.
If it doesn't matter why did you open with this?
When you've baked as much fucking cake as I have in this thread and so many people are just strolling by the beautiful towering bastards without even so much as running a finger along the frosting fuck yes I'm going to serve myself a slice with a smile and have fun with the inherent ridiculousness in a minority of posters here suddenly finding their long lost ability to clutch at pearls and catch the vapors after two-years worth of non-stop hostility and acrimony the second it's aimed at a guy who likes Ghostbusters a lot.
Not that it actually matters how much I like it. Because it doesn't. It really doesn't factor in at all. Nor should it with Rolfe. His liking Ghostbusters a lot isn't really a great justification for his grandstanding bullshit, for reasons I've explained, very thoroughly, prior to this. It's not great justification for much of anything.
To point out that it doesn't matter?
You literally quoted it. You quoted the whole thing, dude.
read it.
I swear to you I'm not making this hard. At all.
That right there is the single biggest issue behind the ongoing geek culture wars: Waking up and finding your traditional band of nerds is no longer the sole target audience of something.I feel like he felt forced to make the video this week by his fans constantly pestering him "hey can we expect a shit storm when you go watch the new one?" and it just pushed him over the edge. He's disappointed after so long that this is the way the franchise is coming back - a film where he's not the target audience. Given his internet reach and popularity overall , going out of his way to pick on and single out this one remake after ignoring the last 15 years of recycled cinema feels like throwing rocks at a corpse. He blends into a crowd and makes it seem okay to be a hater.
The movie's getting an average level of promotion for your typical summer blockbuster. The swirling storm of outrage is what's making the movie bigger than it actually is.Here's thing everyone - the new ghostbusters may well be a bad movie , it could also be a good movie - but the annoying thing is that it's being propped up as something WAY bigger than it actually is and the part that I dislike is that people like me - fans of the original ghostbusters who are also white males in their early 30's - are starting to look bad by association even if we've said something positive. I'm already seeing backlash forming on twitter that the original wasn't that great , how much longer until it becomes seen as a regressive terrible movie because the man children can't grow up just once ?
1. He doesn't need to justify his opinion to you or anyone else.
2. Complaining about grandstanding by grandstanding is weird, dude.
3. You may have explained your reasons, but it doesn't make them sacrosanct.
As someone who saw the original when it was released in cinema I'd say the movie was huge at the time. It was a great cinema movie for everyone, like the goonies, et, indiana jones and similar movies were in the 80s. Don't know where this connection with the nerd community comes from, back then it was as mainstream as it could be, with full families going to the cinema to watch.Why did Ghostbusters resonate so much with the nerd community to where the movie became this holy grail of geek entertainment? Did it appeal to the mainstream?
crowdsurfing joke is some d-tier 90s Pauly Shore comedy schtick
That's the point I was trying to make.As someone who saw the original when it was released in cinema I'd say the movie was huge at the time. It was a great cinema movie for everyone, like the goonies, et, indiana jones and similar movies were in the 80s. Don't know where this connection with the nerd community comes from, back then it was as mainstream as it could be, with full families going to the cinema to watch.
I liked the "DO NOT. MAKE. THE GHOST. ANGRY." bit.The selfie stick bit was great. It's why I've got hope this movie could deliver.
I never said they need to be regarded as sacrosanct. Just that it'd be nice if they were read, not just quoted in full without any real attempt to make sense of them. At which point you're free to disagree, of course, but a lot of these attempts to oh-so-tricksily turn my super-smart talk back around on me and bring me down a peg are really clumsy because in the rush to "ah-haaa!" me nobody's getting a solid grip on what I'm actually fuckin' saying.
Yunno?
His opinion is already justified. I think that justification is also largely horseshit. People like you don't like that. Which is perfectly fine! Your protestations are noted and also being compared to the blithe dismissal frequently put on display whenever the disproportionate response to this film's shitty marketing campaign is investigated.
That comparison isn't super comfy to wear, I'm guessing. When you're insecure about things like "appearing sexist" and "liking childhood shit too much" things like that can feel awkward. Like a too-tight wool sweater. All itchy and uncomfortable.
But the fact remains there's a small subsect of people who have not much problem with people wilding out on any/everyone who has anything to do with that remake for whatever reasons, while simultaneously taking serious offense to a fraction of that same two-years-worth of anger and belligerence being aimed at The Angry Video Game Nerd.
That juxtaposition is kinda funny.
I don’t think “Angry Video Game Nerd” knows that he’s having a sexist reaction to Ghostbusters. I think a lot of guys online DO know that (or that they don’t believe sexism exists, which is even worse), but I don’t think “Angry Video Game Nerd” is sitting around stewing over women in Ghostbusters.
And that’s why his attitude is maybe the most dangerous. It speaks to the way sexism (and racism and plenty of other isms) kind of lives quietly inside of us, and the way it can impact our beliefs and actions without us even once considering it.
but I’m willing to bet these guys would be waaaay less angry if the cast included Seth Rogen and his gang. At the very least there wouldn’t be the vocal boycott brigade
And he doesn’t realize that the root of all this, the root of feeling like someone betrayed his Ghostbusters, comes down to the fact that these Ghostbusters don’t look like him.
The weirdest thing I've seen in this thread isn't the misogyny (or the attempted hand waving explanations of "i know good cinema therefor i am not a misogynist when i say this movie and these ladies are horrible"), it's the fundamental misunderstanding of what the original Ghostbusters movie was.
1. Ghostbusters was NOT your childhood. Was it a movie you loved as a child? Great.
2. Ghostbusters was NOT aimed at you as a child. You (like me) just so happened to be EXPOSED to it during your childhood.
3. Ghostbusters was, for its time and PG rating, a pretty raunchy film. Ghost BJs, "this man has no D", naked woman final boss only covered up in bubbles, plot line ENTIRELY REVOLVING AROUND 2 PEOPLE BONING TO SPUR THE END OF THE WORLD. I could go on here.
4. Ghostbusters was a special effects tentpole movie. Literally no doubt. Critics raved about the special effects that were at the forefront of the movie at the time.
Now, the thing that REALLY irritates me in this thread from people hating on the movie is that they pretty much use each of those lines AGAINST the new one. "It's gross female humor (every crevice)", "it looks like they just pumped the budget into the special effects", "the original was never this raunchy", "muh childhood".
Let's not forget that Sony's marketing teams (or whoever they outsource them to) are notoriously HORRIBLE at promoting their films. There is historical evidence of good to great films looking horrendous just by trailers alone. To judge an entire movie based off of jokes that may not even be in the final cut of the movie (let's not pretend that studios don't film trailer only scenes now, because they do) is ridiculous.
I can assure you I do not give a shit about people criticising him
but trying to set the guy up for a sexist firing line to take him down.
We're seeing a lot of people trying to wrestle these narratives into place:
*I'm the victim because someone might think I'm sexist
*I'm the victim because my childhood memories are being manhandled
*I'm the victim because I can't just dislike something without being judged for it
*I'm the victim because Hollywood won't serve my thirst for original filmmaking.
There are a lot of angry insecure boys trying to ensure you understand how unfairly they think they're being treated simply because they're Ghostbusters fans
I think that justification is also largely horseshit.
That comparison isn't super comfy to wear, I'm guessing. When you're insecure about things like "appearing sexist" and "liking childhood shit too much" things like that can feel awkward. Like a too-tight wool sweater. All itchy and uncomfortable.
But the fact remains there's a small subsect of people who have not much problem with people wilding out on any/everyone who has anything to do with that remake for whatever reasons, while simultaneously taking serious offense to a fraction of that same two-years-worth of anger and belligerence being aimed at The Angry Video Game Nerd.
Thank you.The weirdest thing I've seen in this thread isn't the misogyny (or the attempted hand waving explanations of "i know good cinema therefor i am not a misogynist when i say this movie and these ladies are horrible"), it's the fundamental misunderstanding of what the original Ghostbusters movie was.
1. Ghostbusters was NOT your childhood. Was it a movie you loved as a child? Great.
2. Ghostbusters was NOT aimed at you as a child. You (like me) just so happened to be EXPOSED to it during your childhood.
3. Ghostbusters was, for its time and PG rating, a pretty raunchy film. Ghost BJs, "this man has no D", naked woman final boss only covered up in bubbles, plot line ENTIRELY REVOLVING AROUND 2 PEOPLE BONING TO SPUR THE END OF THE WORLD. I could go on here.
4. Ghostbusters was a special effects tentpole movie. Literally no doubt. Critics raved about the special effects that were at the forefront of the movie at the time.
Now, the thing that REALLY irritates me in this thread from people hating on the movie is that they pretty much use each of those lines AGAINST the new one. "It's gross female humor (every crevice)", "it looks like they just pumped the budget into the special effects", "the original was never this raunchy", "muh childhood".
Let's not forget that Sony's marketing teams (or whoever they outsource them to) are notoriously HORRIBLE at promoting their films. There is historical evidence of good to great films looking horrendous just by trailers alone. To judge an entire movie based off of jokes that may not even be in the final cut of the movie (let's not pretend that studios don't film trailer only scenes now, because they do) is ridiculous.
This is good stuff.
People should read it.
This is good stuff.
People should read it.
Of course you do. You couldn't take the position your'e taking if you didn't. The rest of your post is delineating exactly why you give a shit about people's criticisms of him.
This is the part I'm referring to when I talk about insecurity being a motherfucker, as highlighted very specifically in a previously quoted post:
In your opinion.
I can assure you I can happily defend someone from being criminalized as a sexist .
I wanted to go on and add more about the marketing, reception, and audience type build of the first movie too but I feel like other posters have handled it better. Ghostbusters was a general audience movie. There simply were not enough nerds in 1984 to make a movie one of the highest grossing movies of the year. Baffles my mind that "nerd culture" has stamped their seal of "ITSALLOURS" on it.
No shit
Good lord.
Do you feel like a victim?I never said they need to be regarded as sacrosanct. Just that it'd be nice if they were read, not just quoted in full without any real attempt to make sense of them. At which point you're free to disagree, of course, but a lot of these attempts to oh-so-tricksily turn my super-smart talk back around on me and bring me down a peg are really clumsy because in the rush to "ah-haaa!" me nobody's getting a solid grip on what I'm actually fuckin' saying.
Yunno?
His opinion is already justified. I think that justification is also largely horseshit. People like you don't like that. Which is perfectly fine! Your protestations are noted and also being compared to the blithe dismissal frequently put on display whenever the disproportionate response to this film's shitty marketing campaign is investigated.
That comparison isn't super comfy to wear, I'm guessing. When you're insecure about things like "appearing sexist" and "liking childhood shit too much" things like that can feel awkward. Like a too-tight wool sweater. All itchy and uncomfortable.
But the fact remains there's a small subsect of people who have not much problem with people wilding out on any/everyone who has anything to do with that remake for whatever reasons, while simultaneously taking serious offense to a fraction of that same two-years-worth of anger and belligerence being aimed at The Angry Video Game Nerd.
That juxtaposition is kinda funny.
When you've baked as much fucking cake as I have in this thread and so many people are just strolling by the beautiful towering bastards without even so much as running a finger along the frosting fuck yes I'm going to serve myself a slice with a smile and have fun with the inherent ridiculousness in a minority of posters here suddenly finding their long lost ability to clutch at pearls and catch the vapors after two-years worth of non-stop hostility and acrimony the second it's aimed at a guy who likes Ghostbusters a lot.
Guess what: I also like Ghostbusters a lot. I might even argue I like it more than most of you here in this thread.
Not that it actually matters how much I like it. Because it doesn't. It really doesn't factor in at all. Nor should it with Rolfe. His liking Ghostbusters a lot isn't really a great justification for his grandstanding bullshit, for reasons I've explained, very thoroughly, prior to this. It's not great justification for much of anything.
People being mean to him on twitter, going after his wife and kids, that's just as out of bounds as people being mean to Feig, McCarthy, Jones on twitter. People going out of their way to mean-spiritedly bring up his personal life or his appearance are just as shitty as people going out of their way to cack on McCarthy or Jones' size.
What's notable to me is that it's been two years worth of people very painstakingly going out of their way to make sure everyone looking understands that sexism is just a ghost (hah!) people are jumping at so as to make excuses for why people don't like the shitty marketing on display. They have had little-to-no problem with the sustained levels of nastiness, and have had even less problem minimizing it, and have seemed to thoroughly enjoy pretending they're being somehow persecuted for daring to be lone voices of reason demonized for nothing more than daring to be a guy who has a keen eye for cinematic quality.
And a small number of these same men are now (gasp! shock!) freaked out and utterly dismayed at the "sheer vitriol" being expended towards The Angry Video Game Nerd for his God-Given right to express his opinion honestly and even-handedly.
So again: What we seem to be dealing with here are a group of men who are very insecure about both their opinions, their regard for their childhood, and also (maybe primarily) the possibility they might be labeled as a sexist on the internet, and have decided the best way to counter that insecurity is to attempt to minimize (if not flat-out erase) the possiblity that sexism has anything to do with anything.
This is the double-decker cake that keeps getting wheeled in the way of fairly basic conversation about this film's marketing campaign
Which is, by the way, not great, could possibly point towards Paul Feig fucking the dog on this film, and wasting the talents of his cast and crew in a misguided attempt at modernizing both the tone and humor of Ghostbusters.
Note that I can say that confidently, without ever once having to suggest or even nod to the idea someone might think I'm sexist for saying that. I can dislike the marketing without prefacing that with any sort of worry about how people I don't know may percieve me on the internet, because I'm not at all insecure about my ability to explain my opinions, my standpoints, and am confident my reasoning will hold up when asked for it.
Insecurity is a motherfucker.
I never said they need to be regarded as sacrosanct. Just that it'd be nice if they were read, not just quoted in full without any real attempt to make sense of them. At which point you're free to disagree, of course, but a lot of these attempts to oh-so-tricksily turn my super-smart talk back around on me and bring me down a peg are really clumsy because in the rush to "ah-haaa!" me nobody's getting a solid grip on what I'm actually fuckin' saying.
Yunno?
His opinion is already justified. I think that justification is also largely horseshit. People like you don't like that. Which is perfectly fine! Your protestations are noted and also being compared to the blithe dismissal frequently put on display whenever the disproportionate response to this film's shitty marketing campaign is investigated.
That comparison isn't super comfy to wear, I'm guessing. When you're insecure about things like "appearing sexist" and "liking childhood shit too much" things like that can feel awkward. Like a too-tight wool sweater. All itchy and uncomfortable.
But the fact remains there's a small subsect of people who have not much problem with people wilding out on any/everyone who has anything to do with that remake for whatever reasons, while simultaneously taking serious offense to a fraction of that same two-years-worth of anger and belligerence being aimed at The Angry Video Game Nerd.
That juxtaposition is kinda funny.
I wanted to go on and add more about the marketing, reception, and audience type build of the first movie too but I feel like other posters have handled it better. Ghostbusters was a general audience movie. There simply were not enough nerds in 1984 to make a movie one of the highest grossing movies of the year. Baffles my mind that "nerd culture" has stamped their seal of "ITSALLOURS" on it.
Do you feel like a victim?
My complaining isn't coming from a stance wherein I feel personally afffronted/offended/aggrieved, so no.
I understood Kinyou's post to be a response to my previous post, which followed a line of posts that made very clear what kind of complaining was being talked about, the stance from which that complaining was issued, and the reasoning behind that stance.
It's pretty easy to understand in the context of the ongoing conversations.
If I was, at any point, making an argument sourced from a position of feeling somehow maligned by outside forces in the course of this brouhaha, then yeah, your question about my victimhood might actually apply to me.
But it didn't, and it doesn't.
Insecurity is a motherfucker.
Oh I'm sorry. I guess people have to openly state that they're against any type of harassment aimed at anyone
They feel entitlement. It should be this, it should be that, if it's not what's in my head, it's wrong. People can tell me that not everyone feels this way, and that's absolutely correct, but it does apply to some. The reason why people are frowning upon James' decision to not watch the movie (he's watching the movie btw) is because his reasoning boils down to it not being what he wanted.
And that's not even really... sinful, but it absolutely is him putting a stamp on it and saying it's all wrong to the point where he refuses to watch it in the first place (he'll watch it btw). Nobody's saying everyone should be obligated to go watch a movie, but James being a notorious Ghostbusters fan with a sizable internet following, well, you'd think that he'd at least be more open to seeing it and then proceeding to tear it to shreds, if need be.
I don't understand what the difference is between this and the new Ninja Turtles. The trailers were bad, everyone thought Michael Bay was directing it, there were cries of it ruining everyone's childhoods, the turtle designs were garbage, Megan Fox as April is garbage, Shredder looks like a Decepticon, etc. It also had a huge amount of vitriol, but James still saw it-- and didn't even hate it, despite the odds stacked against it. He didn't love it; what I got out of his thoughts was that he just found it like, passable, not childhood-destructive.
So if seeing that is okay, spending a decade beating shitty videogames to bash them online, gaining a following exactly because of this kind of stuff, I'm not sure why he's defensively opposed to seeing the new Ghostbusters. Again, worst case scenario is that he sees a movie he doesn't like. What's his shtick been for the past decade, again?
He'll watch it, by the way.
So if seeing that is okay, spending a decade beating shitty videogames to bash them online, gaining a following exactly because of this kind of stuff, I'm not sure why he's defensively opposed to seeing the new Ghostbusters. Again, worst case scenario is that he sees a movie he doesn't like. What's his shtick been for the past decade, again?
He'll watch it, by the way.
Because he is/was known as the ANGRY VIDEO GAME NERD. Not the Angry Movie Critic. If you want someone to watch something so you don't have to that's the Nostalgia Critics job.
They feel entitlement. It should be this, it should be that, if it's not what's in my head, it's wrong. People can tell me that not everyone feels this way, and that's absolutely correct, but it does apply to some. The reason why people are frowning upon James' decision to not watch the movie (he's watching the movie btw) is because his reasoning boils down to it not being what he wanted.
And that's not even really... sinful, but it absolutely is him putting a stamp on it and saying it's all wrong to the point where he refuses to watch it in the first place (he'll watch it btw). Nobody's saying everyone should be obligated to go watch a movie, but James being a notorious Ghostbusters fan with a sizable internet following, well, you'd think that he'd at least be more open to seeing it and then proceeding to tear it to shreds, if need be.
I don't understand what the difference is between this and the new Ninja Turtles. The trailers were bad, everyone thought Michael Bay was directing it, there were cries of it ruining everyone's childhoods, the turtle designs were garbage, Megan Fox as April is garbage, Shredder looks like a Decepticon, etc. It also had a huge amount of vitriol, but James still saw it-- and didn't even hate it, despite the odds stacked against it. He didn't love it; what I got out of his thoughts was that he just found it like, passable, not childhood-destructive.
So if seeing that is okay, spending a decade beating shitty videogames to bash them online, gaining a following exactly because of this kind of stuff, I'm not sure why he's defensively opposed to seeing the new Ghostbusters.
However flawed people think his reasoning is ultimately he said he won't watch it because it encourages Hollywood to continue to make reboots that fans don't want. Do you not think this is a valid reason? Look at resident evil. Lots of people love the games up to a certain point which was before it became too action packed. Resident evil 6 was everything most resident evil fans didn't want and the sales showed this. Now they're talking about returning to the "horror" roots and have been remastering the old games. So clearly speaking with your wallet does work at times.They feel entitlement. It should be this, it should be that, if it's not what's in my head, it's wrong. People can tell me that not everyone feels this way, and that's absolutely correct, but it does apply to some. The reason why people are frowning upon James' decision to not watch the movie (he's watching the movie btw) is because his reasoning boils down to it not being what he wanted.
And that's not even really... sinful, but it absolutely is him putting a stamp on it and saying it's all wrong to the point where he refuses to watch it in the first place (he'll watch it btw). Nobody's saying everyone should be obligated to go watch a movie, but James being a notorious Ghostbusters fan with a sizable internet following, well, you'd think that he'd at least be more open to seeing it and then proceeding to tear it to shreds, if need be.
I don't understand what the difference is between this and the new Ninja Turtles. The trailers were bad, everyone thought Michael Bay was directing it, there were cries of it ruining everyone's childhoods, the turtle designs were garbage, Megan Fox as April is garbage, Shredder looks like a Decepticon, etc. It also had a huge amount of vitriol, but James still saw it-- and didn't even hate it, despite the odds stacked against it. He didn't love it; what I got out of his thoughts was that he just found it like, passable, not childhood-destructive.
So if seeing that is okay, spending a decade beating shitty videogames to bash them online, gaining a following exactly because of this kind of stuff, I'm not sure why he's defensively opposed to seeing the new Ghostbusters. Again, worst case scenario is that he sees a movie he doesn't like. What's his shtick been for the past decade, again?
He'll watch it, by the way.
Because he is/was known as the ANGRY VIDEO GAME NERD. Not the Angry Movie Critic. If you want someone to watch something so you don't have to that's the Nostalgia Critics job.
What is fucking ludicrous though is either camp using insults and slander to say the other camp is wrong. That should be reserved for those blatantly posting discriminatory remarks on YT/Twitter/wherever. That crossover is what is toxic right now about the atmosphere surrounding this movie.
However flawed people think his reasoning is ultimately he said he won't watch it because it encourages Hollywood to continue to make reboots that fans don't want. Do you not think this is a valid reason? Look at resident evil.
So we're just going to pretend he didn't get harassed online or really anyone who speaks out against something controversial? Nothing he said was remotely controversial. Yet again i've seen multiple articles written negatively about him. Maybe you don't need to worry because what you say won't make any waves. Lets not pretend that applies to everyone. Some people don't want to deal with it. I can't blame them.This is why I keep telling you to read, man. Because I end up having already answered your questions before you amble along and try to toss 'em back into my lap.
For ease-of-use, here's the direct passage in which someone also asked the question you're asking:
Moving on!
It's weird how not once at any point in my multiple criticisms of this shitty marketing campaign have I ever felt like I needed to worry that anyone is going to think my well-reasoned, thoroughly explained, easy-to-understand opinions would be confused as coming from a sexist place. Strange how confident I am in that regard. As if I'm fairly secure in being able to express myself, and in being able to explain my position.
Like I've done all thread long.
No shit
How many people here have completely dismissed Adam Sandler or Seth McFarlane's movies based on trailers? But this is a problem now because why?I may think some feel entitled. I hate throwing around labels, but the reaction to this from some is relatively damning. However, that isn't meant as an insult. I'm not insulting anyone for feeling entitled; just as you began your post with everyone feeling entitled. That's true, and that's his decision. I'm just not sure what it is about this Ghostbusters, per se, that has him outright refusing to watch it, if it's not a sense of heavy entitlement-- and being into film as much as he is, I know for a fact that he doesn't assume that bad trailers = bad movies. That happens all the time, and vice-versa, and I'm sure he knows that.
But I'm not flinging insults. I'm only saying that completely refusing to see a movie before there's even been any fuckin' reviews is kneejerkish at best, and as myself and others have pointed out already, what if it turns out good? What if a lot of people like it and it reviews well? Will he still refuse to see it? I highly doubt it, and that's the point I'm trying to make. We're all fickle and our minds change and develop as we gather more information. I've seen people say they're far more optimistic about the movie after the new trailer. What happened was that they gathered more information from it and saw things they actually liked more. It's a perfectly normal human response.
That's why myself and others are saying that he's being a little closed-minded and entitled, because he's essentially sealing the envelope over something that he, quite frankly, has no idea how it'll turn out.
I don't understand what the difference is between this and the new Ninja Turtles. The trailers were bad, everyone thought Michael Bay was directing it, there were cries of it ruining everyone's childhoods, the turtle designs were garbage, Megan Fox as April is garbage, Shredder looks like a Decepticon, etc. It also had a huge amount of vitriol, but James still saw it-- and didn't even hate it, despite the odds stacked against it. He didn't love it; what I got out of his thoughts was that he just found it like, passable, not childhood-destructive.
So we're just going to pretend he didn't get harassed online
People being mean to him on twitter, going after his wife and kids, that's just as out of bounds as people being mean to Feig, McCarthy, Jones on twitter. People going out of their way to mean-spiritedly bring up his personal life or his appearance are just as shitty as people going out of their way to cack on McCarthy or Jones' size.
I take the time to respond to you line by line and that's all you've got for me? .
I may think some feel entitled. I hate throwing around labels, but the reaction to this from some is relatively damning. However, that isn't meant as an insult. I'm not insulting anyone for feeling entitled; just as you began your post with everyone feeling entitled. That's true, and that's his decision. I'm just not sure what it is about this Ghostbusters, per se, that has him outright refusing to watch it, if it's not a sense of heavy entitlement-- and being into film as much as he is, I know for a fact that he doesn't assume that bad trailers = bad movies. That happens all the time, and vice-versa, and I'm sure he knows that.
But I'm not flinging insults. I'm only saying that completely refusing to see a movie before there's even been any fuckin' reviews is kneejerkish at best, and as myself and others have pointed out already, what if it turns out good? What if a lot of people like it and it reviews well? Will he still refuse to see it? I highly doubt it, and that's the point I'm trying to make. We're all fickle and our minds change and develop as we gather more information. I've seen people say they're far more optimistic about the movie after the new trailer. What happened was that they gathered more information from it and saw things they actually liked more. It's a perfectly normal human response.
That's why myself and others are saying that he's being a little closed-minded and entitled, because he's essentially sealing the envelope over something that he, quite frankly, has no idea how it'll turn out.
How many people here have completely dismissed Adam Sandler or Seth McFarlane's movies based on trailers? But this is a problem now because why?
Look how badly pretty much every spinoff game has done aside from revelations. While 4 may have been more action oriented it only took 2 games after that before Capcom apparently backed down from the direction they were taking the series. Since then we've had revelations and remake 1 and 0 remastered and apparently statements of how 7 will return to its horror roots. Clearly money talks.IExcept, ya know, for the fact that this is bullshit. I'll look at Resident Evil-- wait, you mean that one franchise that is about to have a SIXTH INSTALLMENT because of how popular and financially successful they've been?![]()
Must I? Alright.
How many recent Adam Sandler/McFarlane films been good? Critically well-received?
Now, compare that to Paul Feig's recent output. Bridesmaids. Spy. The former has a 90% RT, the latter, a 94%. Can you pinpoint me to any Sandler/McFarlane material that has seen that acclaim or box-office success?
No, because their shit is historically bad, whereas Paul Feig's stuff has been doing rather well. As has been pointed out, Spy and Bridesmaids also had pretty terrible trailers, but they were mostly well-received and had great reviews.
That's one of the worst arguments I've seen in the discussion. The AVGN is just a character, he can do reviews of whatever he wants.Because he is/was known as the ANGRY VIDEO GAME NERD. Not the Angry Movie Critic. If you want someone to watch something so you don't have to that's the Nostalgia Critics job.
So you've seen the new Ghostbusters have you?
Look how badly pretty much every spinoff game has done aside from revelations. While 4 may have been more action oriented it only took 2 games after that before Capcom apparently backed down from the direction they were taking the series.
So you've seen the new Ghostbusters have you?