by Lysander » Sun Dec 14, 2003 7:27 pm
Ladis and gentlemen, I present to you--Lysander's impromptoo review of the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, a movie he saw only one time more than three months ago! Can you think of anything that could possibly be a better use of your time? (yes.)
Well, speaking as a "vetrain" movie watcher and complainer, I found the picture itself to be quite enjoyable; good actors, good direction, good group of characters, good (if slightly boring) plot, nice action...
However, its when we get to the characters that the movie splinters and blows away without calling like Jessica Cambel. Y'see, here's the thing: the characters all had *personalities* in the books they were taken from, and now that they've been inserted into this movie they either have different ones or none at all. The Invisible Man is the only one of the group who has anything close to an actual, omg, personality of his own. Nemo--let's face it, Nemo does not have a fucking personality, he's only there because he controls the Nautilous. Yes, that's right, Captain *fucking Nemo*, arguably the deepest character in 20000 Leagues, has been turned into a cardboard cuttout with an omg k00l boat. Mina--wait, before I can bitch out Mina's personality, I have to go over her "powers." See, I've read Bram Stoker's Dracula. In it, Mina is one of the Vampire *huntresses*, you goddamn giant cheesy poof. She *never* becomes a Vampire, EVER, and in fact at the end of the book all of the vampires become very, very dead, making it impossible for her to *become* a vampire. Okay, at one point she gets *bitten* and is in the process of *becoming* a vampire, but she gets *cured*. Errrgh. So, ah, her character. Her character in the movie is nothing short of stereotypical look at me i am a kool vampyre chick i am soooooo sexay don`t i turn u on?.<M/></../.,?/?:/ Disgusting. Jeckyl /Mr. Hyde suffers from a similar stereotype problem, only instead of the stereotypical dangerous lady in leather he is the stereotypical ongsty i have teribal demonns, i laRP Vampire: the Masquerade. Also, Mr. Hyde can't talk to Jeckel, they're too completely different people. Jeckle (watch me spell it differently each time! Bwahaha!) becomes Hyde after drinking the syrum, Hyde isn't a part of the doctor's mind; they can't *talk* to each other. Of course, I could also bring up the fact that Jeqel ends up becoming immune to the syrum and becomes Hyde all the time, at which point he locks himself up in his lab and shoots himself, but that would be just nitpicking.
Ladis and gentlemen, I present to you--Lysander's impromptoo review of the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, a movie he saw only one time more than three months ago! Can you think of anything that could possibly be a better use of your time? (yes.)
Well, speaking as a "vetrain" movie watcher and complainer, I found the picture itself to be quite enjoyable; good actors, good direction, good group of characters, good (if slightly boring) plot, nice action...
However, its when we get to the characters that the movie splinters and blows away without calling like Jessica Cambel. Y'see, here's the thing: the characters all had *personalities* in the books they were taken from, and now that they've been inserted into this movie they either have different ones or none at all. The Invisible Man is the only one of the group who has anything close to an actual, omg, personality of his own. Nemo--let's face it, Nemo does not have a fucking personality, he's only there because he controls the Nautilous. Yes, that's right, Captain *fucking Nemo*, arguably the deepest character in 20000 Leagues, has been turned into a cardboard cuttout with an omg k00l boat. Mina--wait, before I can bitch out Mina's personality, I have to go over her "powers." See, I've read Bram Stoker's Dracula. In it, Mina is one of the Vampire *huntresses*, you goddamn giant cheesy poof. She *never* becomes a Vampire, EVER, and in fact at the end of the book all of the vampires become very, very dead, making it impossible for her to *become* a vampire. Okay, at one point she gets *bitten* and is in the process of *becoming* a vampire, but she gets *cured*. Errrgh. So, ah, her character. Her character in the movie is nothing short of stereotypical look at me i am a kool vampyre chick i am soooooo sexay don`t i turn u on?.<M/></../.,?/?:/ Disgusting. Jeckyl /Mr. Hyde suffers from a similar stereotype problem, only instead of the stereotypical dangerous lady in leather he is the stereotypical ongsty i have teribal demonns, i laRP Vampire: the Masquerade. Also, Mr. Hyde can't talk to Jeckel, they're too completely different people. Jeckle (watch me spell it differently each time! Bwahaha!) becomes Hyde after drinking the syrum, Hyde isn't a part of the doctor's mind; they can't *talk* to each other. Of course, I could also bring up the fact that Jeqel ends up becoming immune to the syrum and becomes Hyde all the time, at which point he locks himself up in his lab and shoots himself, but that would be just nitpicking.