Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice

  • Yhdysvallat Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (lisää)
Traileri 1
Yhdysvallat, 2016, 151 min (Erikoisversio: 183 min)

Ohjaus:

Zack Snyder

Perustuu:

Jerry Siegel (sarjakuva), Joe Shuster (sarjakuva) (lisää)

Käsikirjoitus:

Chris Terrio, David S. Goyer

Kuvaus:

Larry Fong

Näyttelijät:

Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Jesse Eisenberg, Diane Lane, Laurence Fishburne, Jeremy Irons, Holly Hunter, Gal Gadot, Kevin Costner (lisää)
(lisää ammatteja)

Juonikuvaukset(1)

Ohjaaja Zack Snyderin elokuvassa Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Oscar-voittaja Ben Affleckin esittämä Batman/Bruce Wayne ja Henry Cavillin Superman/Clark Kent kohtaavat ensi kertaa valkokankaalla. Peläten mihin jumalana pidetyn supersankarin teot saattavat johtaa Gotham Cityn pelonsekaista kunnioitusta herättävä omankädenoikeuden harjoittaja haastaa Metropoliksen arvostetuimman modernin ajan pelastajan. Samaan aikaan ihmiskunta yrittää selvittää, millaisen sankarin he oikeasti tarvitsevat. Batmanin ja Supermanin sotiessa keskenään, nousee ilmoille uusi uhka, joka saattaa ihmiskunnan suurempaan vaaran kuin koskaan aiemmin. (SF Film Fin.)

(lisää)

Videot (42)

Traileri 1

Arvostelut (21)

POMO 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Fans would see this as the best sex of their lives, but for casual viewers it might be a hard pill to swallow. Christopher Nolan’s Batman anchored in reality was replaced by Zack Snyder's expansive comic universe. Because of the number of characters and even more motivations, this would require a slower pace and an even longer runtime. Yet it remains an immersive experience, with familiar music from Man of Steel (there is no trace of the motifs from Nolan’s Batman trilogy). In the last third, the demands on the viewer’s attention decrease and we’re in for a nerdy climax. I enjoyed the linking to Man of Steel at the beginning. Ben Affleck’s performance is okay. ()

J*A*S*M 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti A film so dark that you can’t see anything in most of the actions scenes, and to such extent that it looks as if the cinema was showing a low quality bootleg. The long expected duel between two of the most famous comic book characters unfortunately ends up in a rather uneventful scene (I counted only one interesting moment) where Batman and Superman beat the crap out of each other, only for their conflict to end with an incredibly cheap script cop-out so they can fight together some sort of big-eyed, digital extraterrestrial monkey, created in a weird way for weird reasons (the motivations of the lead villain, hello? Are you there?). Incidentally, you have to wait an ungodly long time for any action to happen, and when it finally happens, either you can’t see anything (as I’ve already said), or it is a confusing digital mess where lightning flashes around the aforementioned monkey, explosions are followed by explosions, and the experience equals zero. And on top of that, Lois Lane gives the right answer to a question form Batman she didn’t hear, or throws a spear into the water so she can dive for it later and almost die, without any dialogue that would reveal its importance or enough information to allow her to figure it out for herself. Disappointment. Probably the only positive thing in the end was Affleck as a grumpy Batman, I would love to see him in another film. PS: I gave Man of Steel 5*) ()

Mainos

Malarkey 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti What could Batman vs Superman possibly have offered? Most of all, a stupid story full of nonsense and nothing the viewer could grasp onto. Be ready for the fact that there is and there always will be just one Batman – Christian Bale. Also, Henry Cavill will never be a successful Superman no matter how hard he tries. I feel as if DC had already combined two very different worlds back then in the comic simply because they didn’t know what to do anymore. Personally, I think it doesn’t make sense at all and I pity all the people involved in the movie, because it’s a completely pointless comic-based piece that came out during a time when the whole world is already full of those and a mediocre one simply won’t do anymore. ()

Lima 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Three-hour Ultimate Edition; definitely a grown-up comic. This film is just like Nolan's The Dark Knight Rises, it's similarly ambitious as an author, it's told on a grand epic scale, it wants to convey a lot, so the usual runtime isn't enough, it's just so sprawling that maybe it's detrimental to it and the average viewer won't appreciate it, which is a shame. Judging by the reviews, I was afraid of Eisenberg's overacted Lex Luthor, and unnecessarily so, I was also afraid Snyder would reveal his other self, again unnecessarily so (the 15 minutes or so of the fight with Doomsday were easily digestible), so my criticisms would be small, for example the reconciliation of Batman and Superman was too rushed, but otherwise it was fine and in the unedited ultimatum version everything made sense, everything fit together. The result was better (i.e. darker, more mature) than most of the overstuffed Marvel films for undemanding teenagers. And in retrospect I now appreciate the previous Man of Steel, though my complaints about the digital clutter remain. PS: A message to those who complain about the film being too dark: don't look at screen rips or low quality dvd-rips (1,5 GB and smaller), fools.... ()

Isherwood 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Reading all the nerd theories and analyses of how far Snyder's vision actually reaches is fine. It clarifies a lot and provides the opportunity to look forward to the DC version, but on the other hand, it indicates the fact that it doesn't give a damn about the average viewer because if you don't get on the geek bandwagon, those characters without proper motivations will eventually beat you to death in 2.5 hours. The digital finale is fine. But the futile relationship with the (foster) mothers? Not so much. PS: This is the most boring music from Zimmer in 15 years. PPS: In the Ultimate version, I especially appreciate Jena Malone's 20 seconds, which paradoxically adds a more meaningful dimension to Lois Lane. The rest of it is rather subtle directional cues for viewers to clarify motivations, but there is no epic sweep. It’s just a more sweeping comic book movie that wants to set a more mature tone with its Nolan-esque bleakness but gets too overwhelmed with unnecessary visual gluttony and is stripped of perspective. ()

Kuvagalleria (287)