Roland Emerich's "Midway" will make "Pearl Harbor" look like "Saving Private Ryan"

In the trailer there is a cut. One shot of someone heading towards the surface. Cut. Shot of someone looking into the distance cheering. Time will tell but I don’t think your assessment is correct.

Yeah, that is the impression I got from that shot.

I have to apologize to Mr. Emmerich. I saw Midway, and it was both good and historically accurate (save a few minor quibbles).

I saw it opening day in a completely empty theater but left without a lot of thoughts so I never really had much to say in this thread.

It was a 100% by the numbers film, they got mostly everything right but it really wasn’t that exciting despite the source material. 75% of the dialog felt like it was exposition telling the audience basic historical facts (“Hey you’re torpedoes are faulty!!!” etc.) and the other 25% was incredibly cliche war film lines.

I watched Knives Out the other day, and Midway must have been playing next door (well, at least somewhere in the complex!). All through my movie BOOM BOOM BOOMBOOM. It was annoying.

Many Yharin ago, I had a 70mm print of 2010 in my cinema complex. At the end, where Discovery lights her engines, the boom was enough to send the manager of the department store under us flying up the escalator screaming we had bounced everything off her office desk, again.

…and the home office wondered why we kept “Breakin II Electric Boogaloo” in the house next to our 70mm screen. Hell, you could feel the floor move at the concession stand, 6 houses away!

Yes, we saw it. I was wondering why they left in like 15 minutes of Doolittle’s raid, until I remembered the chinese market.

Also I think Harrelson was terrible.

Good action scenes. Many nits could be picked but not bad as films go.

Use the Force.

Regards,
Shodan

I have often wondered whether movie-house owners receive some sort of kickback from local sellers of hearing aids.

(Haven’t seen the movie, yet. Wikipedia says it cost $100 million and has taken in only (!) $123 million to date. Maybe the Chinese market shrugged?)