Ayer wrote Training Day and directed End of Watch.
But he also made Sabotage.
But he also made Sabotage.
Ayer wrote Training Day and directed End of Watch.
But he also made Sabotage.
The website Collider has consolidated excerpts from most of the reviews so far...the heart-breaking consensus is that the movie is...TERRIBLE...this is very disappointing I was really looking forward to enjoying this one...oh well...
All 4 reviews I watched on YouTube said the movie was great and that Leto was fantastic. How about we all just wait until we see the movie to talk about it?
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Ok but I don't see why we should let other people's opinions guide our own.
I'm going to wait till I see the movie to know if I think it stinks or give it a 10/10.
Yes, we do. LolThere are a bunch of people going to a restaurant and getting sick from the food. It's got a low score from the health inspector. Do we really need to pay our hard earned money and get diarrhea ourselves to know we shouldn't have eaten that meal from that chef??
There are a bunch of people going to a restaurant and getting sick from the food. It's got a low score from the health inspector. Do we really need to pay our hard earned money and get diarrhea ourselves to know we shouldn't have eaten that meal from that chef??
People becoming sick from food is fact.
Whether or not you like a movie that others don't is an opinion.
Spoiler:Still, at least elsewhere there’s a proper bad guy to chew on. Though only a wild card, occasionally capering in and out of the main plot, Jared Leto’s incarnation of the Joker is essential to its success. Where Heath Ledger’s version was scarred, shabby and countercultural, Leto’s has a smooth, blingy gangsta swagger; a modern take on the way the original comic-book creation riffed on ’30s mobsters. But it’s not his swish, purring style and elegant, slo-mo cackle that really hooks you, it’s something we’ve never seen before: the Joker in love. Here’s a fascinatingly jagged new angle (cinematically at least). It’s unsettling and compelling — almost enough to make you wish it were more than a subplot.
Spoiler:Those hoping to see lots of Jared Leto’s much-hyped Joker, who’s second-billed in the movie’s advertising below Will Smith, should adjust their expectations accordingly: His grill and tattoos appear mostly in flashbacks, and then only in a pointless subplot that could have been removed from the movie with zero consequence to the primary story. (For all his insane preparation, Leto’s Joker is basically just a 1930s gangster with green hair and bad tats; he never approaches the complexities of the men played by Jack Nicholson or Heath Ledger.)
Read More: ‘Suicide Squad’ Review: The DC Movie Universe’s Darkest Night | https://screencrush.com/suicide-squad-review/?trackback=tsmclip
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