Hey, you're preaching to the choir. I was only addressing that GI Joe fans (the main ones speculating that Duke would be written back in) have their heads up their own ass.JediTricks wrote:Cowing to fanboys too much makes a project inaccessible to anybody, even said fanboys. Plus, anybody invested in Tatum's Duke that much is kidding themselves so it doesn't matter what's on the screen, only what's in that person's head, and that means they can never be satisfied.Onslaught Six wrote:Yeah, but these are GI Joe fans. Go ahead and go read HISSTank sometime, if you want to feel like rinsing your eyeballs out with bleach. These guys make Geewunners look like revolutionaries.
Yeah, there were a few shots, but I don't think he ever gets it back. He certainly didn't seem to have it any later in the movie.Ok, I wasn't sure if it was out of his hands for that long, does it get flipped away after the shuriken bit? I thought he flipped around and was standing over by it again after. Anyway, that's one of those things that shows Chu's inexperience, having a big moment with the uzi only to not have it later means making a bigger deal out of losing it.
Between this, sending comics back, and butt pictures, there's a lot of threats around here lately.First off, don't threaten me with suggestions of rewaching ROC, that should be classified as a warcrime!
I guess you could debate that, but then you have to say stuff like "Heavy Duty is Roadblock," and that doesn't make much sense at all.Anyway, "Mindbender" in the movie is just some regular-ass jerk who makes nanites and then disappears and doesn't matter at all, BUT then we have "The Doctor" who wears a monacle and acts like Mindbender and goes bald, he's the one that turns out to be Cobra Commander. The Doctor Mindbender character is CC in ROC, I stand by that.
[quite="Dom"]Aside: Shame on Hasbro for not making a Lady Jaye (at least as far as I know), given her high profile in the movie. [/quote]
No, they did! She's in the, uh, well...the toyline's kind of a mess right now. But they made one. She's in what Hasbro is now calling "Wave 2.5," which (before the delay) was the original Wave 3 and would have hit sometime last August. Now, the new "Wave 3" is way bigger and totally different, while Wave 4 will have most of the figures from "Wave 2.5" and some carry-overs from Waves 2 and 3. (She's also mostly just Renegades Scarlett with a new paintjob, head and a buttload of guns, but that's not a bad thing.)
http://generalsjoes.com/reviews/2013/re ... yjaye.html
Hard to say; apparently so far Retaliation has made about $132 million worldwide, beating the tar out of ROC's $91 mil release weekend. ROC made about $300 million worldwide in its theatrical run. Paramount has all but greenlit the third movie now.The movies are not likely to do well enough to warrant a yearly sequel
That wasn't Jinx, that was just some lady with optic camo. It might have been intended to be some poor imitation of Jinx, but she was never named in ROC.-Jinx: Did somebody forget that she was in the first movie, (during a training scene), or is that simply being ignored?
Clutch is apparently named at one point. (He's driving the vehicle holding the warhead; Duke calls him by name at one point.) Havok, it turns out, is one of those "placeholder names that made it into the credits by mistake," like "Wheelbot" from ROTF. The actor listed as playing Havok actually played Zandar, Zartan's head Secret Service guy. Nobody can confirm that "Grunt" made an appearance though. (Might have to wait for the DVD for that one.) I also recognized a "Stoop" in the credits, but apparently that was Roadblock's Ice Cube lookalike friend from the hood.-confirmed Joe kills: Duke and Mouse are obviously killed in the massacre. The credits list Grunt, Clutch and Havok. (Havok is not a name I recognize, and was actually the name of the a vehicle in the original series. Maybe they meant to call him CrossCountry?)
Get this--according to Stevenson and Chu in interviews, Firefly is intended to be an ex-GI Joe member. But that, like a lot of little plot details, apparently got cut for time."Sigma 6" was a good example of FireFly being redone right. When I first saw the toy, I figured that Hasbro was just re-using the name to keep it trademarked (not unlike their being a Minicon named "Shockwave" in the "Cybertron" series). I just happened to catch some of the cartoon and something about FireFly's voice made me think that they were setting up for something. (He had a "bad guy" voice.) That was sort of clever.
(I actually bought the S6 FireFly toy, despite not really liking the look of the line over-all.)
Joe and TF share some of the same producers--the same producers who didn't understand that there were Autobots and Decepticons, and that Transformers need to talk."Sigma 6" was a good example of FireFly being redone right. When I first saw the toy, I figured that Hasbro was just re-using the name to keep it trademarked (not unlike their being a Minicon named "Shockwave" in the "Cybertron" series). I just happened to catch some of the cartoon and something about FireFly's voice made me think that they were setting up for something. (He had a "bad guy" voice.) That was sort of clever.
(I actually bought the S6 FireFly toy, despite not really liking the look of the line over-all.)
While I can't claim to defend Blind Master's portrayal, in a screenwriting sense his role makes perfect sense--take him away, and you have Storm Shadow trying to justify his actions and defend himself against a character who doesn't talk. How's that going to work?Yeah, the ninja scenes were a waste of narrative time. Blind Master was poorly played....and added nothing to the story.
It's worth noting that Chu and the choreographers actually had Hasbro send them some toys, and they worked out the mountain scenes in a production room somewhere using couches and lamps. (I have a few extra zip lines. You want them?)But, credit where credit is due. The ninja fight was well paced and set against a gorgeous background. And, for all it lacked in narrative terms, it had kid appeal up the wazoo. I have not bought a single "Retaliation" figure. But, I will say that all of those zip-line gimmick figures make me wish that I was a kid or maybe had a few kids more directly in my life. That scene where Snake Eyes and Jinx just drop on to a conveniently "there" line and slide down, oh man I would have eaten that up as a kid, logic and sensibiltiy be damned.
It's possible that even if Breaker and Heavy Duty were originally from other countries, GI Joe was a US-based unit. (The Pit being in Egypt throws a cog in this, but Hawk is clearly an American commander, as are most of the other members in ROC.) Given his backstory, Snake Eyes is also possibly from Japan. (I think Heavy Duty is supposed to be South African.)I noticed that the movie back-pedalled on "GI Joe" being international, as it was in the first movie. Breaker (Moroccan) and Heavy Duty (West Indian maybe?) may have died. But, why was the US President/Zartan able to wipe out the team with no international repercussions?
Best I can think of is that Zartan is a greedy fuck. Alternatively, maybe the nanomites wear off after so many months. (Realistically, Retaliation seems to be taking place, at best, a year or so after ROC. There's no reason to assume that the nanomites would continue working after the President's current term.)Of course, given the logic of Zartan's actions, I suppose I should not have expected much better than what the movie gave us with Storm Shadow. Seriously, think about Zartan. The guy is a mercenary who has found himself in a cushy job that has a fantastic retirement package and offers easy money doing speaking tours and such *for life*. Why the hell would he upset the apple cart by releasing Cobra Commander?

