Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

It bums me out the more I think about it, because honestly, a couple of slight restructuring and script tweaks would make the movie INFINITELY more satisfying, just as a genre thriller. I actually don't mind the open endedness and lack of payoff as much, but it's just unsatisfying on a sci-fi thriller level. Like literally, instead of doing  the surgery scene in the middle, move it to the end, and instead have a small breather where the characters acknowledge the fact that one of them was just burned alive after being infected with an alien virus. Cut out the random zombie attack scene.
Have them discuss the situation a bit, speculate about what might be going on, THEN jump into the Weyland stuff.

That would both mimic the structure of Alien better, give the middle act a breather to reset for the climax, and give us a stronger and more satisfying climax. And it's literally like a day or two worth of script edits.......ARGH

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

For more signal less noise check out GavRovs blog. He not happy with Ridley, as designer of Moon should know something. http://www.gavinrothery.com/my-blog/

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Review 1.

“And it's also a mess, at least as far as its narrative is concerned. Almost nothing is explained coherently, and the plot has great lapses...The end of the film is both gruesome and sentimental. Mr. Scott can't have it both ways, any more than he can expect overdecoration to carry a film that has neither strong characters nor a strong story. That hasn't stopped him from trying, even if it perhaps should have.“

Review 2.

“Design is a vital element, especially if the audience is to accept anyone’s physically imposing vision of the future, but staggering technical virtuosity – in and of itself – can never replace character and story values. And this realization points out Scott’s fatal flaw...Had Scott cared to extend this lavish attention beyond the film’s settings, we might now be contemplating a fully-realized masterpiece. By falling well short of classic status, given the great potential implicit in the material and the film’s undeniable achievements, the film taps a keener disappointment than would be felt in the presence of lesser ambition and lesser results.”

Review 3.

“He seems more concerned with creating his film worlds than populating them with plausible characters, and that’s the trouble this time.”

Can you guess which of these reviews are for Prometheus? Trick question, none of them are. They're all for Blade Runner, and they were written at the time of that film's release. Is there any reason to believe that Prometheus will garner some sort of respect twenty years from now?

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

I've seen other people bring this up, and I tend to disagree with the comparison.

For starters, the Blade Runner that people love now is pretty significantly different from the Blade Runner that was released theatrically, and I just don't see a Prometheus director's cut being such a radical departure that it would suddenly make it into a masterpiece (though I hold out hope it will make it at least a solid genre movie).

More importantly, I would say that Blade Runner is a vastly more subtle movie, both in terms of theme, character, and dialogue, which makes it easier to be re-assessed with a different interpretation.
Not being born when it came out, I can't put my self into the frame of mind of an audience that disliked it, because I love the ever-loving shit out of the movie, but I would guess the criticism would be that the movie takes it's time, is kinda vague in places, and the lead character is pretty unlikable (which is the whole point of the movie, but I digress). Prometheus' problems are very different and almost opposite. It's not a subtle movie at all, characters constantly re-state all the supposed themes, and more importantly there is lots of pretty bad dialogue that immediately jumps out at you. These are the kinds of obvious fundamental issues that don't go away with time and re-interpretation, unless the movie is meant to be a satire of bad science fiction movies (which I've actually seen people try to argue).

Frankly the comparison makes me cringe, I mean christ, this movie ends with a fan-service shot of an alien crawling out of a bald dude. Blade Runner ends with the villain rescuing the hero, both physically and psychologically, and lamenting his mortality as he dies.

Lets not go crazy here people.

Last edited by bullet3 (2012-06-12 17:41:49)

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Yeah, it feels sort of desperate for people to claim that this film is a deconstruction or parody, or that the twenty minutes that got cut will somehow explain the 90 billion nonsensical things going on in here. Like people really desperately love Scott's old sci-fi films and need this flick to be at that same level. It's been 30 years, tho. That guy is gone.


Blade Runner was not good at all when it came out.

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

My memory, as a (I think) thirteen year old SF fan when Blade runner came out, was that it was that flop only "real" fans got, and most of us forgave the flaws due to the awesome visuals. Also, you know, if you don't understand it it's because the film is just so deep! It was the anti-Star Wars, really, and gained a following for that as much as anything else.

Last edited by Invid (2012-06-12 22:36:33)

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Ya, like a simple way to say it is that if Blade Runner had failings, they were because it refused to follow hollywood 3-act conventions and give you everything you expect (which is what makes it cool). Prometheus is much more conventional, and it's failings are the same as any other stupid Summer blockbuster from the last 5 years.

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Squiggly_P wrote:

Yeah, it feels sort of desperate for people to claim that this film is a deconstruction or parody, or that the twenty minutes that got cut will somehow explain the 90 billion nonsensical things going on in here. Like people really desperately love Scott's old sci-fi films and need this flick to be at that same level. It's been 30 years, tho. That guy is gone.

He's an old man in his mid-70s. Cutting-edge artistic creativity peaks in the 25-40 age range, and drops off rapidly.  None of Ridley Scott's later efforts have been great (basically anything this century).

Fincher was in his 30s when he did Fight Club. Cameron did Aliens when he was 29. Orson Welles did Citizen Kane even younger.  Kubrick did Dr Strangelove in his 30s.

As Woody Allen, George Lucas, etc has shown, there's a bell curve of creativity which tapers off with age. Although one can always think of the occasional exception, it's more likely that your best work will be before 50 rather than after 50. In the sciences, age is even more crucial. Darwin, Newton and Einstein were in their 20s when they had their radical intellectual breakthroughs. The brain starts to calcify after 30-odd.

The bottom-line is that my expectations of Blade Runner 2 by octogenarian Ridley Scott are very low.

not long to go now...

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

I have to call bullshit on that whole idea. That's a fundamentally age-ist viewpoint, and I would actually pretty strongly disagree about Scott's more recent filmography. I think Kingdom of Heaven DC is outstanding, I think Black Hawk Down is a fucking impressive film-making accomplishment, and American Gangster is way better than people give it credit for.

Clint Eastwood has had many misses as a director, but he's also made several excellent films in the last 20 years.

Woody Allen has had plenty of good late career films.

I agree that there's certainly an aspect of a "hungry" young film-maker trying to prove themselves that results in a higher success rate, but it's not a firm rule by any means.

Reading the interviews with Ridley/Lindelof, it's clear to me that Lindelof/Spaights were the weak link on Prometheus, not Ridley. Ridley basically threw out a bunch of ideas he thought would be interesting (and I think they are, personally I think the whole Space Jesus thing is a really ballsy way to go and a neat sci-fi concept), and had Lindelof write a script around them. The flaws here are "connective tissue/dialogue" more than the concepts themselves, which is the fault of the screen-writer. Furthermore, the design and technical aspects of the film are absolutely outstanding, so you can't tell me Ridley's lost it or wasn't giving it his all on the project. If he's to blame, it's for approving the script, and not hiring some-one else to take a pass on it and refine the dialogue.

If Blade Runner 2 is being written by the original writers of Blade Runner 1 (which I believe is the case), then I think that movie could still turn out absolutely great.

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

avatar wrote:

He's an old man in his mid-70s. Cutting-edge artistic creativity peaks in the 25-40 age range, and drops off rapidly.

Given you're saying this the week the new RUSH album comes out, I'm going to have to respectably disagree.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

If anything, this has less to do with age and more to do with working in the industry for so long. Maybe for some people making entertainment products is like muscle memory. They don't have to try anymore, so they don't bother. It all depends on what they get handed to work with. Woody Allen makes a movie every single year and occasionally one gets him an Oscar nomination.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Most of those directors probably don't have an army of people questioning everything they do now, either. If there's anything Lucas has taught us, it's that surrounding yourself with people who will kiss your ass all the time is the worst thing you can do. That and when you're young and only have a few above-average movies under your belt, your actors are more willing to work outside your expectations as well. If some film making legend like Woody Allen tells you how a scene goes, you probably just do that, cause the guy's Woody Allen. Who the fuck are you to question him? But that's often how the best performances happen. Achieving that legendary status probably makes people afraid to stand their ground on things like that.

With this flick, I think it was more a case of people being impressed with the performance of Star Trek and Lost and the desire to get the guy who wrote those to write this flick as well. From interviews I've read, I can only assume that the script they started out with was maybe decent, but relied on the previously established Alien lore. It still had all of that weird space jesus stuff in it where the engineers created life, it just dealt with it while adhering to the previous films' rules. Lindelhof got a chance to read the script and wrote an e-mail that basically said "That's great, but here's how I'd do it:", and then he pulled a bunch of bullshit out of his ass to make an impression. Then he got the job and had to actually write all that bullshit and... well...

... Prometheus.

That age thing better be wrong, tho, or I'm completely fucked tongue

Last edited by Squiggly_P (2012-06-15 03:19:53)

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

bullet3 wrote:

I have to call bullshit on that whole idea. That's a fundamentally age-ist viewpoint, and I would actually pretty strongly disagree about Scott's more recent filmography. I think Kingdom of Heaven DC is outstanding, I think Black Hawk Down is a fucking impressive film-making accomplishment, and American Gangster is way better than people give it credit for.

Clint Eastwood has had many misses as a director, but he's also made several excellent films in the last 20 years.

Woody Allen has had plenty of good late career films.

I agree that there's certainly an aspect of a "hungry" young film-maker trying to prove themselves that results in a higher success rate, but it's not a firm rule by any means.

Reading the interviews with Ridley/Lindelof, it's clear to me that Lindelof/Spaights were the weak link on Prometheus, not Ridley. Ridley basically threw out a bunch of ideas he thought would be interesting (and I think they are, personally I think the whole Space Jesus thing is a really ballsy way to go and a neat sci-fi concept), and had Lindelof write a script around them. The flaws here are "connective tissue/dialogue" more than the concepts themselves, which is the fault of the screen-writer. Furthermore, the design and technical aspects of the film are absolutely outstanding, so you can't tell me Ridley's lost it or wasn't giving it his all on the project. If he's to blame, it's for approving the script, and not hiring some-one else to take a pass on it and refine the dialogue.

If Blade Runner 2 is being written by the original writers of Blade Runner 1 (which I believe is the case), then I think that movie could still turn out absolutely great.

Some good points. I didn't say it was some 'rule', just that a director is more likely to astound you with something jaw-dropping you haven't seen before when he's younger than older. You're right that the weak link with Prometheus was the script (and with Kingdom of Heaven it's Orblando Bloom), but the buck has to stop with the director who has final say in approving these creative decisions. It's not like Ridley has no clout with the studio.
Scott's 'bell curve' is shifted to the right, as he started late (Alien was age 42). Most directors are well established in their 30s. But you must admit Scott's output the last decade has been mostly bland (A Good year, Robin Hood, etc). His last great movie was Gladiator (2000). Compare that with his output in his first decade as director - mostly game-changing hits. And I would venture that's the pattern for most directors. Woody Allen fits this bell-curve pattern exactly - and because of the prolific output, there's high 'resolution' in charting the lame early movies, the strong mid-career movies, and the high proportion of duds in late-career.

The artist gets 'what they have to say' out of their system, and the fuel tank runs empty (sorry for the mixed metaphor). And in the sciences too (mathematicians are washed up at 30). Not saying I like it, but its fairly evident from biographies for major artists and scientists. The brain is a physical organ, and just like an Olympic athlete, it performs better when younger.

It's hard to think of directors, authors, composers, artists, scientists, etc that got better with age and did their best stuff after 50. There must be isolated examples, but for every one we can cite, there'd be 10-20 that fit the normal bell curve that reveals declining creative powers with age.

not long to go now...

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Doctor Submarine wrote:

If anything, this has less to do with age and more to do with working in the industry for so long. Maybe for some people making entertainment products is like muscle memory. They don't have to try anymore, so they don't bother. It all depends on what they get handed to work with. Woody Allen makes a movie every single year and occasionally one gets him an Oscar nomination.


If you've become an established legend, then surely it's more likely that you've got complete freedom in choosing any project. It's no longer a case of 'what you get handed'. Sure, if you're starting out, there's hack- work, without final cut or cast-approval or even script-approval (e.g. Fincher on Alien3). But by the time you've got some big commercial successes & critical acclaim under your belt, you have more creative freedom. You can't blame late-period duds on studio-interference or poor material.

They don't have to try anymore, so they don't bother

That may be the reason, although I'd go further and say that even if they did try (and surely there must be plenty of directors that want to recapture the glory days of youth), they find it harder to come up with something radically new. Happy to be proved wrong - would love Blade Runner 2 to NOT be Crystal Skull or Phantom Menace or Prometheus.

not long to go now...

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Another issue with the movie no one's said yet - the head autopsy? What was the point of that?

Holloway, who apparently has been waiting for this moment all his life, the first ever examination of an alien body, is drinking booze and doesn't care while his wife reanimates a frigg'n alien head!

Then the head explodes. For no reason. Then they all just forget about it. Whatever.

Just like the storm, the scene didn't advance the plot in any way.

Just like Vickers trying to get off the ship in a life-capsule, only to die straight away anyway.

I just can't believe how shoddy the screenplay was! The more you think about it the worse it gets. When you watch the behind-the-scenes to The Social Network, there's weeks of Fincher and Sorkin and the cast going through the script meticulously scene-by-scene working out every character motivation to every word.

It seems like Ridley Scott just shot without even reading the script. "It's the bloke that wrote Star Trek? I'm sure it's fine. Right, let's go, scene 1, take 1, and action..."

What's also interesting about Prometheus, is the disconnect between mainstream reviewers (it looks great!) and the nerd/geek/demographic fan base that know the genre/franchise intimately.

not long to go now...

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

About that life capsule thing:

Let's do some math. There are three dudes piloting the ship, there's Vickers, there's nongeologist and unbiologist that get killed, there's Shaw and Halloway. There's David. I think there's some asian chick or something? I can't remember. That makes, what... ten? What happens to asian chick? Does she get killed? What about the medical staff? The four or five guys that are helping the old man puppet put his slippers on. Did they all go into the alien ship at the end? Did the engineer kill them all? I only recall the engineer killing like three people.

Were those other people still on the ship when they drove it into the other ship?

It doesn't really matter much, just...  if they weren't on the ship or were in a buggy, like...  waiting outside for the old dude to finish having his body replaced or whatever the fuck he thought was gonna happen in there...  I dunno...

And, avatar, I really don't get how the critics out there can let this movie get off. This fucking movie may as well be called Transformers 2. It's so broken. All it has going for it are the camera work and effects and ... some of the acting, but the acting really doesn't matter. The characters are ALL either stupid or hopelessly broken themselves. Their motivations are all screwed up, their actions often make no sense at all... It doesn't even matter that they're performed well. I almost can't tell if they're well performed or not, cause I can't figure out what they're supposed to be doing / feeling / wanting / etc.

It's like instead of pandering down to people with fart jokes, racist humor and pointless scenes of cool over-the-top action, this movie is pandering UP to snobby arthouse critics by giving them pointless metaphor, bullshit philosophy and confusingly bizarre sequences that OBVIOUSLY have to mean SOMETHING...  right?

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Squiggly_P wrote:

It's like instead of pandering down to people with fart jokes, racist humor and pointless scenes of cool over-the-top action, this movie is pandering UP to snobby arthouse critics by giving them pointless metaphor, bullshit philosophy and confusingly bizarre sequences that OBVIOUSLY have to mean SOMETHING...  right?

That's a really great way of putting it. And the internet nerds have fallen for it hook line and sinker.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Squiggly_P wrote:

Were those other people still on the ship when they drove it into the other ship?

When the zombies attack (can't believe I'm writing this), don't some crew get knocked off? When the old man wakes up, he seemed to have attendants that we've never seen before, as if they were asleep with him. The background characters are so bland, you can't care. In Aliens who know have many marines there are and how many die in the first attack.

Squiggly_P wrote:

And, avatar, I really don't get how the critics out there can let this movie get off. This fucking movie may as well be called Transformers 2. It's so broken. All it has going for it are the camera work and effects and ... some of the acting, but the acting really doesn't matter. The characters are ALL either stupid or hopelessly broken themselves. Their motivations are all screwed up, their actions often make no sense at all... It doesn't even matter that they're performed well. I almost can't tell if they're well performed or not, cause I can't figure out what they're supposed to be doing / feeling / wanting / etc.

It's like instead of pandering down to people with fart jokes, racist humor and pointless scenes of cool over-the-top action, this movie is pandering UP to snobby arthouse critics by giving them pointless metaphor, bullshit philosophy and confusingly bizarre sequences that OBVIOUSLY have to mean SOMETHING...  right?

As one reviewer pointed out, not only was there a difference between mainstream critics and genre geeks, but between British (where it opened earlier) and American reviewers. The Brits were more likely to call bullshit on it ('was it shit or really shit?'), whereas the Americans started bending over backwards to confabulate theories that supposedly rescued it from clusterfuck to profound meditation on human nature.

From Ridley Scott's perspective (& the studio's), it's a success. Box office? Healthy. Mainstream critics on Rotten Tomatoes? Overwhelmingly positive. Forums are abuzz with discussion about what it means. That can only be good, right?. "Let's do another one".

Single most cringe-worthy line in the movie: "It's what I choose to believe"

not long to go now...

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

You know what?

I really enjoyed it.

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

http://i.imgur.com/oEKoP.jpg

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Faldor wrote:

You know what?

I really enjoyed it.

You're out of the club.

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Faldor wrote:

You know what?

I really enjoyed it.

http://i288.photobucket.com/albums/ll198/evilash1990/original-1.jpg

Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Dave wrote:

You're out of the club.

Wasn't I already out the club the for refusing to not to enjoy Scott Pilgrim?  neutral

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

I enjoyed Scott Pilgrim and didn't like Prometheus...where do I stand?

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Re: [Spoiler Zone] Prometheus

Owen Ward wrote:

I enjoyed Scott Pilgrim and didn't like Prometheus...where do I stand?

http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4ppgeTRiO1qzozj1.gif

I think most of the people here thought Scott Pilgrim was OK, tho, so...

I haven't watched all of it. I don't even know why. I just keep stopping it after ten or fifteen minutes.

Last edited by Squiggly_P (2012-06-17 02:14:41)

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