Bass
Nexus of the World
thee great one said:You see I love the animation and the look of the show. I think the villains are fantastic looking.
I think the animation of The Batman is brilliant, and Joker and the rest of the villains look very cool.
My problem is this -
When Batman TAS originally aired nothing on tv looked like it.
When The Batman originally aired, as cool as it looked, it looked like every other cool American-anime cartoon out there.
That's my problem. It looks sweet, but it's just like everything else.
Random said:I agree its okay to have the Joker be more of a fighter, and Pengiun is just completely and honestly stupid. In Batman TAS he had a lot more depth and wasnt some dumbass comic relief. I REALLY hate this when it happens. They had good on all the essentials (mainly animation and such) and they completely blow it. Its like they have no brain. Its just like the Mtv Spider-man, they had a everything needed except a good plot, story, character developement, dialogue, character interactions, or ANY kind of direction.
GODDMAN IT I'M REALLY PISSED OFF NOW!!!. I wish I had control over the animated shows, I bet you I could make the greatest series ever.
MTV Spidey was stupid. The Timmverse puts the majority of superhero comics to shame. It improved the mythos. It didn't just re-tell it.
Victor Von Doom said:But see...everyone has their own idea about what would be great. That's what revision is all about.
Case in point---look at my Punisher fanfic. A total reimagining that I think is awesome. Instead of a murderous vigilante...I made him into a field interrogator for S.H.I.E.L.D. But he still has his military background. I think this reimagination is awesome...some may disagree. And that's their perogative.
Thing is, the job of the writer is to make their ideas lovable, by telling them in a way to make people love them as much as they do, which is not the talent of creativity, but of craftsmanship. I mean, Tolkein created a wonderful story and reality, but in my opinion, doesn't tell that story too well.
So it's not so much who thinks what is great, but the writers making the audience appreciate what they think is great as much as they do.
I think I'm rambiling too.