Mesenterium
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i totally agree about hercules, treasure planet, and atlantis: the lost empire. milo was the first disney character i was able to empathize with as a child; i never enjoyed the princess movies, and while i didn't understand why, then, i think now it's because the end goal is to meet prince charming (with the exceptions of some movies, like aladdin, pocahontas and mulan). i really wanted to be an archaeologist, even before i saw the movie, so i really loved him right off the bat, and he sort of became an idol for elementary school me. milo's just a good guy who's fascinated by the ancient world and wants to be taken seriously.i also had some very confusing feelings about why i wouldn't mind being in his place, romantic relationship with kida included. i didn't know i was gay, but i knew kida was hot.long story short, that movie was a big part of my childhood. if we're still talking disney, i find that the hunchback is severely underrated. now, onto newer movies! i found that knives out was pretty underrated, despite receiving nomination for an academy award i had absolutely no idea what it was or what it was about until i saw it up for rent on direct tv. i absolutely loved it. it's a beautiful satire on muder mystery tropes with a good message and a sweet revenge ending. it constantly keeps you engaged as the plot thickens, just like a non-satire murder mystery.
No Disney movie has ever been underrated. You were probably just too young to recall exactly how popular it was, or you weren't born yet. All of the Atlantis movies were huge, they just came out in a time when people moved on quickly because good films were being released on a steady basis.
Hercules was insanely popular. MacDonald's ran that Happy Meal toy line for what seemed like 2 years. Disney's Hades is literally a pop culture icon.
Also, view your post via mobile and tell me that format isn't the worst thing since Season 5 of Community. The fact that you don't bother to capitalize has somehow amplified the illegibility.
You say that but I don't recall BvS being underrated either. The marketing was massive. Trailers were playing all over convenience stores here. Giant banners and billboards on the highway. Every brand whether it's a Telcom company or a phone brand was releasing BvS themed merch. This continued long after the film was out of the theaters as well.
(As for what I thought of that movie...yeah. Super underwhelming movie.)
Marketing has nothing to do with the consensus formed by the viewer after the fact. The consensus on BvS, was that it was underwhelming, broken, disjointed, overtly depressing, the list goes on and on. It was called anything but a good DC movie because, you know, no one actually reads comics anymore.
Let me ask you this: What did you think of Captain America: Civil War?
and people are still talking about it until today.
Lastly, I don't exactly see how my thoughts on Civil War would affect my thoughts on BvS?
Fair point. I suppose it has a certain innate advantage being a Batman, Superman, and even Wonder Woman film. It does have a very large DC Fan following, we're just far from that majority.
I was curious how you felt about a Disney/Marvel version of a similar film, similar premise, that actually had way more characters shoehorned in, and much less action. Furthermore I always like to know where people sit on the DCEU-MCU spectrum. There's this magic thing that happens when you go to see a Disney movie. I don't know if it's in the air vents, the sodas, popcorn or nanites in the chair fabric, but people just change. Intricate plot work is no longer needed. You can't actually feel anything but happiness for more than a few fleeting (forgettable) seconds. And even if you're overly emotional, some side character like Draxx is always there to shattered the tension with a good pun. It makes people love every last second of every last thing they see and hear, no matter what it is. No matter how underdeveloped, generic, and boring it is.
Maybe it's because I'm no stranger to psychoactive chemicals and have built up a superhuman level of tolerance, but Disney's crack has no affect on me. I was dragged to all three new Star Wars in theaters. Not because I wanted to. Not even because I had expressed interest in passing and was later held accountable in some sort of 'cool clique' bit. No. It was because in 1999, I made the fatal mistake of going to see The Phantom Menace with my friends in theaters. And when Attack of The Clones began releasing trailers, I made a decision that came back to haunt me. I knew Hayden Christensen would shit the bed...ruining Vader forever!
I tried to warm them, but they wouldn't listen. They didn't understand Hayden like I did. They didn't know he'd reduce Vader to a skulking whiny bitch. And so they went without me. Anyone else would have simply moved on, but not my boys. I was never permitted to live it down. Never able to outrun it. Until Force Awakens was announced.
I was forced to sit through every agonizing minute of all three Star Wars Junior movies.
tr;dr: This lock down is getting the best of me. I feel like a zoo animal must feel. Every. Single. Day.
I'd explain why I prefer Civil War but this is not the thread for it. Just know that I'm not a comic book reader and I'm not particularly loyal to either franchise so I just take their films on their own merits.
I came here to talk about Atlantis, but looks like you already did it for meQuite straight forward: what film do you think that is underrated? And why? What do you like about that film that makes you think that it is underrated?
For me, the first ones that come to mind are those two films about Atlantis that Disney created: "Atlantis: The Lost Empire" and "Atlantis: Milo's Return". I love how they were influenced by Nordic Mythology, the character designs are astonishing, as well as the scenery. This doesn't apply to the original version, but I love the dubbed European Portuguese version of the films: the voice actors are great. The critics claim that there isn't much of character development and that the whole plot is not coherent, but I believe that it is due to the introduction of many different cultural aspects, which, in my opinion, only makes it better.
Unfortunately, I think it was rather underrated: afterall, Disney cancelled the construction of an attraction at Disneyland and a spin-off tv series. Critics also say that the film was more targeted to adults than to children in general, which contributed to its reduced popularity, compared to other Disney films.