Lego's bat solo movie story itself is well written, and it's the kind of story that looks good. If the original character of the character is not mentioned, I can give a high score. But just because I go to the big movies just to see the bats, I feel like it doesn't do well enough.
After all, in a rubbish story, no one will take the character creation seriously at all, and a story with a good packaging but the core of the character is not right may make people ignore the latter and think that the bat is like this.
I was pushed for this movie because many, many people told me that this movie would blow up most of dc's animated and live-action movies, and the compliments included "different from other movies, portraying his Bruce Wayne side", "Deeply explores the core of the character of Batman". Although everyone knows that The LEGO Movie can't be taken too seriously, of course my psychological expectations will become very high when it is said like this
And at the beginning of the movie, the bat who was jumping around and running the train with his mouth actually raised my expectations instantly. I thought it was going to make an all-star Batman (even I was moved for a few seconds that all-star bats can actually become mainstream), I was already slightly disappointed when I found out that I ended up portraying his loneliness and self-defense, with the very classic stereotypes, "Batman acts alone" and "Batman never cooperates."
But it's okay here, and it's no problem to lower the expectations. Although I think some places have been stereotyped, this old man looks very young, and he insists on persuading me that this is a new man who just made his debut, ojbk.
But then the big movie threw a very serious question, the point of view that many black bats would raise:
Batman isn't serious about rooting out crime in Gotham at all, he just enjoys it. And when he doesn't feel like he's being noticed, he'll start looking for trouble.
To be honest, when I saw this, my subtlety reached its peak, the kind of loneliness you shape him ojbk but why use such serious content to shape it. Does the director know how serious this matter is for bat fans - he may know, but he still has to pick it up and play, so I will expect the director to give me a LEGO entertaining but warm answer at the end.
But the director didn't. Barbara Gordon and Batman's governance concepts are very different. How to solve it? Make Barbara Batgirl and she won't hold back! Batman has friends! Does it matter if he's someone who simply refuses to cooperate with the police for his own entertainment? This problem is over!
Batman didn't respond to this question from beginning to end, this question is much more important than loneliness.
At once. Although the conclusion is made at the end, there, the way the director interprets it has given me a very strong:
The director just wants to play tricks, but he doesn't actually care about the feeling of the master who has finished playing tricks like this.
Of course, I wouldn't expect any in-depth content discussions in Lego World, but after raising my expectations to the all-star Batman, tell me sorry the director just wanted to show me a bunch of classic Batman stereotypes... …………
I am very lost.
After that, it was the last straw that broke the camel's back when I got to Zhenglian, because I have been brainwashing myself. Oh, this may be a young headstrong bat, plus Lego can't take it seriously. Don't be too serious to let yourself accept this. Results Director:
It's a bat formed by the Justice League!
…………The self-deception is a big failure!
So there's no way I've actually been able to really see the character in this story as Batman since then—even the comedian-style Lego Batman that would make me smile. To me, it's completely taken away from the character of Batman, and it's become something the director wants to talk about who hasn't been able to come out of the alley with autism in his entire life.
Instead of seeing the protagonist as Batman, I actually enjoyed watching it. Whether it's his interaction with Barbara or the Joker, I'm laughing out loud (I actually personally hate how the Joker does Gotham to get Batman's attention because I think it pulls the Joker down Crazy and absurd, and like Morrison said, a hero's character can be influenced by his opponent - turning the Joker into a sick stalker pulled Batman's character down in my mind. He The showdown with the clown is more of an absurd battle of faith and chaos in my heart...) But this bat is not a bat at all, but an original character wearing a helmet, so why should I bother about the clown of shaping. I have regarded it as a purely original story wrapped in a bat's shell throughout.
We often say that those in the fandom just want to create their own original stories, and then temporarily cover the creation of the creation is very bad. So I have the same attitude on Lego.
(Of course the story is really good)
(But I'm here for the story of the bat. I want to buy duck meat and give me a chicken. I still think it's not bad...it's not bad, but I don't think it's right for you to call yourself a duck)
(And still the bat who has set countless stereotypes, I'm really speechless)
We usually say that the flaws don't hide the flaws, but for me this movie is the flaws that cover the flaws. And it is precisely because the story is written well enough.... I really see a lot of people's sincere conclusion that "yes, the lord is blabla", I really want to ask in everyone's heart that bat is a completely for being Love is concerned but dare not ask for love and run to fight crime. If there is no crime, do you have nothing to find and invent the image of crime?
Of course it's still "good-looking". It's just that I personally wouldn't recommend it to anyone.
That's it.
I don't really want to talk about Lego so seriously, but since I was asked why you should be so serious about the plot, I decided to give my opinion seriously anyway.
"It's a Lego, if you're serious, you lose."
I agree with this on the one hand, and deny it on the other hand. What I dislike is the insincereness hiding under the shell of being serious and losing. When I hear this, what I actually want to see is a serious work shaped in the most absurd and ironic way, such a bold and avant-garde, instead of:
We are just playing with the bat stereotype but you can't say us because you say we are too serious and you lose!
The latter is really boring. Even with Lego I still feel inferior.
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