11-18-2010, 06:38 PM | #1 | |
Kawaii-ju
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Gladiators V. Werewolves
Bringing a whole new meaning to the phrase "Dog Latin"
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11-19-2010, 12:52 AM | #2 | |
Blue Psychic, Programmer
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No, it's vast amounts of stupid. Werewolves who can change at will? Wow, isn't that just convenient and riding the bandwagon? Throwing them in the arena with the hero? Cheap excuse for action. Hero stripped of his rank? Change of heart and joining the other side in 3... 2...
This is the kind of thing I'd expect to see in converted 3D.
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11-19-2010, 12:55 AM | #3 |
Kawaii-ju
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The big twist is at the end Victoria Stilwell shows up in full chainmail bikini mode and utterly trashes the werewolves.
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11-19-2010, 01:22 AM | #4 | |
History's Strongest Dilettante
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"There are worlds out there where the sky is burning, and the sea is asleep, and the rivers dream. People made of smoke and cities made of song. Somewhere there's danger, somewhere there's injustice, somewhere else the tea's getting cold. Come on, Ace; we've got work to do!" Awesome art be here. Last edited by BitVyper; 11-19-2010 at 01:24 AM. |
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11-19-2010, 01:25 AM | #5 |
Just sleeping
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Honestly, this could be really cool. Like, turn-your-brain-off-and-enjoy-the-carnage cool. I've heard worse set-ups. And it's not like I'll have to pay to see it.
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11-19-2010, 01:36 AM | #6 | |
Fight Me, Nerds
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There are of course the Skinwalkers, Yee Naaldlooshii, etc from Native American lore But hey! Way to jump on the "lets hate a folk myth figure without even bothering to educate ourselves on it just because it's been a little mistreated by fame" bandwagon
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11-19-2010, 01:58 AM | #7 |
oh, what fun we will have!
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Yeah. Where have you been, Blues? I'd say half the werewolves you see in fiction change at will. World of Darkness, Discworld, WoW, ....Twilight. It's a long list. See where Werewolves intersect Voluntary Shapeshifting*
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11-19-2010, 02:02 AM | #8 | |||
Blue Psychic, Programmer
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Or, to put it this way, until Twilight came around, the predominant image of a werewolf in the Western (or at least American) public has been the kind that turns shaggy and feral on the night of the full moon. [edit] Or maybe I'm just wrong about how often it's abused. Either way, it raises issues (see below). I mean, really, there are all kinds of werewolves, but you don't see the vampire-werewolves that are terrified of frogs from Cajun myth cropping up very often, either. And that's not even the worst of it. If it's all at will, wouldn't you WANT to get bitten by one just so you could have awesome werewolf powers? Get a Roman soldier bitten, have him spread the love, steamroll Europe with your monster army, The End. There's no mention of getting bit automatically turning you against non-werewolves. Hello Larry's Construction, we need a cement truck to patch a gaping plot hole. :P
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11-19-2010, 03:19 AM | #9 |
Sent to the cornfield
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Becasue the entire point of the werewolf story is the battle to control the animalistic instincts and it works even better if they can choose when to control the transformation becasue then they have an active battle with temptation. It is similar all the Jeckyll and Hyde stories-wherein the shit versions just place Hyde as the villain but the better versions play the villainy of Jeckyll too- his active seeking out of an animalistic side, using Hyde as a scapegoat, he controls the transformation more in these versions. If the werewolf can't control his transformation you lose a lot of drama in favour of a guy who goes out and kills people but he can't control it so it's not really his fault.
And the Romans knew that shit too- the Satyricon has a Roman soldier who is a werewolf, the other soldier shits himself. |
11-20-2010, 02:00 AM | #10 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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Werewolves changing at will is at least as old as the whole Dracula concept where the werewolf/vampire dynamic is basically mixed (i.e. vampires can turn into wolves, bats, etc. at will).
I mean I'm not sure if it was just Bram Stoker sticking the werewolf legend and wampyr legend into one thing, though, or if they were basically stuck together back in time. If they existed as separate concepts back when then that's cool but it just seems like Eastern Europeans probably were just like "demonic monster withces suck blood and turn into wolves and crap", I don't think they differentiated stuff out into separate legends and monsters, I think there was a lot of bleeding together. But somebody who knows more can fill me in. Regardless though the changing at will isn't really new, and like Smarty said the concept of having to fight their animal instincts comes into play, though I think there is an element of drama here if he can't control it to an extent, like if they get too angry they start to change and can't help themselves, but there is an element of control if they can calm themselves, etc. The whole "turn into a werewolf under the full moon" thing just seems uninteresting. It's just some external factor that has nothing to do with their emotions or personality. This concept sounds cool but it has a dumb name (I mean, is it Gladiators v. Werewolves or is that just the thread title?). There's no real reason to have a title that just describes the basic concept of the movie other than to render the thing intentionally satirical which takes away a lot of the subtlety that would actually make it enjoyable. To an extent the thing should take itself mock seriously. Like this movie sounds like if Machete had been titled "Action Exploitation Movie" or "Action Man Kills People". There's no subtlety to a joke like that. So I disagree with this film's title being so obviously satirical. It should have had a classier title.
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