The lack of blood. In Legend of the Seeker, Kahlan Amnell is a priestess who goes on long treks across the country dressed in a white robe, skilled not only in the use of knives but the ability to kill multiple people with said knives without a drop of blood being spilled.
Side note: I just figured out that Bridget Regan, who played Kahlan, is now playing the Russian assassin in Agent Carter.
And really, it’s no less realistic than an Iron Man suit, or a Helicarrier. You just have to accept that comic book movies feature comic book technologies. IMHO, it’s one of the advantages of the genre - it sets side any scientific nitpicking and allows them to tell the story they want to tell.
Never play the Ace Attorney games - Phoenix Wright, the main character, at age 22, is the lead defense attorney on a capital murder case in his very first trial, and he’s one of the older rookie lawyers introduced in the series - a prosecutor he tangles with later got her first man sentenced to death at 12.
(Granted, this is an anime-ish series where ghosts can legally testify in court, a prosecutor can oversee his own son’s trial and nobody has a problem with it, and you can be sentenced to death by default if your attorney takes too long, so they’re not really going for real-world accuracy in the first place.)
Right, this is a world where Howard Stark invented impossible things fifty years before we still haven’t invented them yet. If you see what I mean. So if it’s a “Stark” PC, it will be quite capable of containing Zola’s conscience.
So I was the one that mentioned the nazi computer in Captain America 2, and I only did so because we were talking about outdated looking computers in films – I just gave it as an example and said in that case I didn’t mind it, I found it funny.
Still though I want to respond to some of the points being made.
Firstly, even if we’re just in the comic book essentially magic world, it still jars to see the tapes whirring for the same reason the fantastical steam-based machines in a number of films (for some reason only wild wild west comes to mind) seem wrong. It’s better to just show no mechanism than one we know has been superceded and has known limitations.
Secondly Captain America is in the marvel universe, but IIRC his own films have at tried for a different level of plausibility and “realism” (scare quotes because obviously I’m just speaking relatively here).
I think those films can be judged as separate entities.
If the defence of “It’s the same universe as Iron Man” works for how the nazis can make such outdated technology achieve something the best supercomputers in the world today can’t even do 1% of, then we can raise lots of questions such as why none of the avengers helped Captain America trivially solve the problems he encountered in the second movie.
I’m reading No Doors, No Windows by Joe Schreiber right now, and I guess it’s okay though nothing particularly scary has happened yet. But I got yanked completely out of the story when the main character took his nephew to a Sunday church service, and then stopped at the Millburn public library on the way home to do some research while the kid was in the children’s room. I know that Millburn, New Hampshire is a fictional town but I doubt there’s a town in NH that has a (non-university) library with Sunday hours.
That realism has always included WWI era magic potions, Nazi rocket ships, people falling into glaciers and living for 70 years, flying aircraft carriers, indestructible boomerang shields and a whole lot of other magic technology that is only ever used by the supers and never released to the public. If it was meant to be more realistic, it was by a fine margin. Personally I think that a Nazi super-genius surviving as a one-off in an experimental computer is no more unrealistic than a GI super soldier surviving as a one-off in a glacier. Neither event is meant to be replicable by the average Joe.
It’s only outdated in the same sense that Caps shield and the WWII Nazi rocket ship are outdated. IOW it’s outdated within the movie world but it’s incredibly futuristic compared to this reality.
This was explained within the movie: Cap had been framed and was a fugitive. he had no way of securely contacting the other heroes, and even if he did, they were all SHIELD affiliated. He had no way of knowing they would believe him. Bad enough facing ordinary mooks, but the chance of Iron Man siding against you is a hell of gamble.
Of course they could always explain it exactly the same way the comics always do: the other heroes were on their own missions. IOW Captain America 2 takes place simulatenously with Iron Man 3 and Thor 2. That’s the reason why Superman and Zatanna never use their abilities to trivially solve Batman’s problems, even when his failure will result in the Joker killing millions of people. Top tier heroes have top tier problems that only they can deal with. They don’t always have time to help out street level heroes with street level problems, even if they are literally on the same team. And of course all the occasions where they fdo help out are never shown because they are boring. Superman catches the Joker in 3.7 seconds isn’t a good story.
One reason why I liked the Justice league Unlimited cartoons: every so often they spent 3 seconds explaining Supes or someone was busy. Ya think a movie could do the same?
This is a script artifact from an earlier version supposed to star Ahhhnold where he is obsessed with the song Gimme Shelter and The Rolling Stones, they changed it to Bob Marley and it doesn’t really make sense anymore you’re right.
I could see someone not being able to name a BM song(even this strains) but to go who is Bob Marley? Nah no way, unless they are really isolated from western culture.
I assume that it’s a problem with “casting” instead of “forging.” To cast something, you pour a liquid into a mold. That isn’t how you make a steel sword.
Game of Thrones, in an episode of Season 4 they had graffiti written in English and they later showed that the books in Kings Landing are also written in English (they never showed the interior of the books closely enough before to tell what language they were in). Took me right out of the story that did, sure I can accept them speaking English in a ‘Hunt for Red October’ sense (that they’re really speaking some other languages but we’re hearing it in English). But while I can suspend my disbelief for the spoken word I can’t achieve it for the written word apparently.
Oh and Man of Steel, an ungodly strong nigh-invulnerable human-looking alien who flies around wearing his underwear on the outside? Yeah, OK, whatever…
But a ‘fifth-generation’ farmer running into the path of a tornado to save a dog? I think not, I grew up on a farm and while my family certainly never mistreated our dogs it was made clear from the start that they were working animals and not pets. Farms can be dangerous places and as children we were told that no matter what happens you don’t put yourself into harms way to save an animal. I can’t imagine it being different for anybody else from a farming background.
I didn’t particularly like the movie anyway, but that scene moved it from ‘meh’ to ‘ludicrous’ for me, ‘fifth-generation farmer’? If that’s the way he and his forebears behaved they must have been very short generations.
The Westerosi books being writing in English didn’t bother me (after all if spoken English can stand in for spoken Andalish it might as well be the same for writing). My problem was why are Meereenese slaves writing graffiti in Andalish instead of Meereenese or Ghiscari.
This bugs me about ANY movie: someone gets conked on the noggin (gun-butt, frying pan, what have you) and just goes unconscious for a short while, when s/he wakes up, they scratch their head and go merrily on their way–no concussion, no swelling, no blood running off the back of the head, no staggering, no crushed cheek-bones, no bashed-in noses, no skull fractures; occasionally, someone will acknowledge a boo-boo on the back of the head. I’ve had a near fatal concussion, so this probably makes me cringe worse than other people might.
I think I have the same problem. This made me think of HBO’s Rome*, where the graffiti scribbled on walls, in the intro sequence and sprinkled through the show, is in Latin. And, yeah, you’re right, it would really have bothered if it had been in English. Although I don’t have a problem with all the Romans walking around speaking English.
That is a strange thing indeed.
(*Which, BTW, is a show that I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with, since it goes out of its way to get things right and do things intelligently, only to turn around and go just as far out of its way to get other things wrong and do things stupidly. But that’s for another thread…)
The Genesis planet had complex hydrocarbon chains in its upper atmosphere as a result of the terraforming, so what you saw was actually intended to be wind-blown Styrofoam.
Agreement. (And it’s often followed by the “Ow! Antiseptic spray stings!” farce. A guy can get pounded to meatloaf, but when his sweetie gently cleans his wounds, he winces and hisses.)
Or how 1000 years of Frenchmen all have English accents(The Musketeers ,Captain Picard)
What really bothered me was the airplane lavatory zombie. If they turn in under 30 seconds, how the hell did he get bit, board an airplane, stow his luggage in the overhead bin, then go to the bathroom without anyone noticing?