Or babies.
I still can't get over the Powerpuff Girls remake being nitpicked to death as if season 6 didn't already ruin the franchise. Meanwhile I stewed over that excuse for a movie with a title called Underdog for branding reasons and using up a license that Disney should never have bought in the first place and everyone looked at me like I was the guy in his underwear on the street saying the world was ending. I mean, I'm glad I wasn't the only one that thought so, since the internet's favorite cartoon writer (only when he's working on DC based cartoons, though) Paul Dini gave a thoughtful, insightful, but none the less annoyed and ticked off summation of that movie.
But here's the thing. He never once sent death threats or made it about his own personal agenda. He gave the movie the thrashing it deserved without resorting to nastiness or pretending to be the victim of an imaginary conspiracy theory. As for me, I made a small fuss and didn't see it. In the end, all I can say about the movie is a "don't like? Don't watch. Enjoy some Ecto-Cooler." In the end, it's a different continuity anyway, so it doesn't matter. Only reason this one was rushed to the finish line is because of the development purgatory the third GB movie was going through. Bill Murray was being obstinate about it, but...it's so hard to be mad at Bill Murray. You can say "you did both Garfield movies and you found an idiotic excuse for it" all you want, it's still Bill Murray. Then when things looked like they were getting traction, Ramis died. And frankly, I don't think the fans would have liked that movie anyway. It's not Mad Max Fury Road here where the film got great reception decades after the last one. I'd say it's more like Tron Legacy or Crystal Skull. It would thematically be the same movie but they'd have some odd problem with it. Like half the Jurassic Park fanbase that hates the (actually good) World movie but pretends the second and third films weren't crap.
I still can't get over the Powerpuff Girls remake being nitpicked to death as if season 6 didn't already ruin the franchise. Meanwhile I stewed over that excuse for a movie with a title called Underdog for branding reasons and using up a license that Disney should never have bought in the first place and everyone looked at me like I was the guy in his underwear on the street saying the world was ending. I mean, I'm glad I wasn't the only one that thought so, since the internet's favorite cartoon writer (only when he's working on DC based cartoons, though) Paul Dini gave a thoughtful, insightful, but none the less annoyed and ticked off summation of that movie.
But here's the thing. He never once sent death threats or made it about his own personal agenda. He gave the movie the thrashing it deserved without resorting to nastiness or pretending to be the victim of an imaginary conspiracy theory. As for me, I made a small fuss and didn't see it. In the end, all I can say about the movie is a "don't like? Don't watch. Enjoy some Ecto-Cooler." In the end, it's a different continuity anyway, so it doesn't matter. Only reason this one was rushed to the finish line is because of the development purgatory the third GB movie was going through. Bill Murray was being obstinate about it, but...it's so hard to be mad at Bill Murray. You can say "you did both Garfield movies and you found an idiotic excuse for it" all you want, it's still Bill Murray. Then when things looked like they were getting traction, Ramis died. And frankly, I don't think the fans would have liked that movie anyway. It's not Mad Max Fury Road here where the film got great reception decades after the last one. I'd say it's more like Tron Legacy or Crystal Skull. It would thematically be the same movie but they'd have some odd problem with it. Like half the Jurassic Park fanbase that hates the (actually good) World movie but pretends the second and third films weren't crap.