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Reviewers that don't pay attention

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  • Reviewers that don't pay attention

    I have noticed a disturbing trend and perhaps the secret why reviewers don't often agree with the audience.

    The most recent example I saw was a reviewer saying that the Houseman played by John Paxton popping up to give Harry Osborn the information on how his dad really died was a deus ex machina character who did not exist prior to this moment.

    The reviewer in question was clearly not paying attention as the character actually appeared in all three movies played by the same actor and the only crazy part is he hadn't told Harry the truth in the second movie.

    I don't mind if a reviewer has a different opinion than me on a movie hey that is their right but seriously when their opinion is based on incorrect information then it brings their whole opinion into question.

    I think the problem is if a reviewer doesn't watch the movie before reviewing it. By sitting there making notes while watching a movie your missing a good portion of it and something like a small character will slip by you unnoticed for two whole movies.

    Or the reviewer claimed to have loved a movie that came out prior gushes about how everything in that movie was amazing and then in the next sequal complains about something that is directly from the second movie.

    Or saying something like, "And it irritated me they never answered question X" when most of the audience is like, "uhm dude actually at this scene here they thoroughly answered that question"

    Anyway the rest of you ever notice this problem?
    Jack Faire
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  • #2
    You'd think the reviewer would have at least checked IMDb or the like before tossing out some obviously ignorant crap in the review.

    I've run into this a few times, where you wonder what movie it was the reviewer saw, 'cause their details bout it sure as hell don't match with the movie the rest of us watched.

    ^-.-^
    Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

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    • #3
      Then there always seems to be a handful of reviewers who will hail even the shittiest movie as totally awesome. Again making you wonder if they even watched the same movie. I guess they're quotefishing to get their name on the DVD cover.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
        Then there always seems to be a handful of reviewers who will hail even the shittiest movie as totally awesome.
        See I never mind if they like or dislike a movie that I either did or didn't like it's all about getting their facts straight.

        They shouldn't say, "The movie never explained this" when the rest of us noticed when Captain Jay gave a 2 sentence line that explained that exact thing.
        Jack Faire
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        • #5
          I remember when Man of the House came out with Tommy Lee Jones. I thought this movie was very funny and definitely worth watching, yet all the supposed critics said it was very bad. They were focusing on things like plot, character development.. it was a freaking comedy. It was supposed to be funny and it was.
          The problem with critics is thier job is to easy. Ive noticed that people with easy jobs tend to make them more complicated then they need to be in order to help protect thier phoney baloney jobs.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by jackfaire View Post
            See I never mind if they like or dislike a movie that I either did or didn't like it's all about getting their facts straight.
            I do, because I pick up a movie that's allegedly good, full of wonderful characters with a fantastic plot and its turns out to be awful with a plot and characters only a drunken frat boy recovering from a head injury could possibly percieve as good. Then I wonder wtf is going on in Hollywood that this trash is the yardstick of quality.

            I can excuse like or dislike no problem, but not blatant lying as to the quality of a movie because they bought ad on your website or you want your name on the poster. I should extend that one to game reviewers too. ( Gamespot, ugh ).



            Originally posted by bara
            I remember when Man of the House came out with Tommy Lee Jones. I thought this movie was very funny and definitely worth watching, yet all the supposed critics said it was very bad. They were focusing on things like plot, character development.. it was a freaking comedy. It was supposed to be funny and it was.
            Thats another thing, a lot of critics don't differentiate between good/bad and entertaining. A movie can be entertaining without being Academy Award material.
            Last edited by Gravekeeper; 11-27-2011, 03:31 PM.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
              Thats another thing, a lot of critics don't differentiate between good/bad and entertaining. A movie can be entertaining without being Academy Award material.
              This. So much this.

              Real Steel
              wasn't great cinema, but it was damned enjoyable to watch. Oddly, they came out in favor of Puss In Boots, which had no real depth, but was also damned fun to watch. Go figure.

              ^-.-^
              Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
                Thats another thing, a lot of critics don't differentiate between good/bad and entertaining. A movie can be entertaining without being Academy Award material.

                Neither do I. To me if it was entertaining it's good.

                I don't mind their saying it was good or bad because if I can look at their reviews and see that they have generally the same taste as me or not that tells me whether to trust their saying something was good or bad.

                But I cannot trust a reviewer who says a movie was bad beause he missed something.

                I actually commented on one of the reviewers I was researching. We were talking about Wolverine the origins of movie.

                Now in the movie there is a moment between Stryker and Sabertooth where Sabertooth asks why he can't get the adamantium treatment and stryker says, paraphrasing, we have talked about this it would kill you.

                Now the thing is the reviewer stated, "Why didn't they save a bunch of time and money from tricking Wolverine and have Sabertooth undergo the procedure"

                When I pointed it out to him he wrote back saying he was a student of the comics which I am sorry as a reviewer has nothing to do with whether or not facts appear in movie dialogue. Then compared the two line exchange to a silent fart.

                I am sorry this is the reviewer that claims to remember 90% of every movie he watches.

                To my mind they did not need a 10 line conversation for what is really a very simple fact and succintly explains why not Sabertooth.

                To me that is an injustice to movies. If you don't think the line was enough to explain it fine then in your review say, 'It was explained in these two lines but I don't feel most audience members would catch it'

                Honestly I think his basically stating the line would go by unnoticed is a face saving measure. If you miss a line of dialouge that happens in a quiet moment then you should question if your really watching the movie or if your taking notes.
                Jack Faire
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                • #9
                  Oh boy, I have experience with this one.

                  In addition to collecting merchandise from the original "All Dogs Go to Heaven" movie, my all-time favorite movie, I also collect reviews and synopses that are completely incorrect. My personal favorite, currently used in my area by the Hub but I have seen it on other channels whenever the movie comes on goes like this:

                  After passing away in a terrible accident and leaving his owners, a goodhearted German shepherd dog is offered a chance at redemption and opportunity to live eternally in Heaven if he can save an impoverished orphan girl's life. Starring Dom DeLuise, Loni Anderson...
                  I like to call it "Burt who?"

                  Many reviewers in guide books and such have descriptions a lot like this. If you've seen the movie, you'll know what's wrong. If you haven't, well, here's the Cliff notes

                  *It wasn't an accident, he was deliberately murdered (you don't have to say murder if it's a kid's channel, but if you know what happened then don't say accident.)
                  *He was a stray, you never heard a word about owners.
                  *He wasn't offered a chance at redemption, he broke out of Heaven. He was told flat-out he could never go back.
                  *He did end up in Heaven for saving an impoverished orphan girl's life, but for most of the movie he was using and manipulating her. He saved her life in like the last five minutes. He didn't intend to make her life better until near the end when he started to care about her.
                  *Burt Reynolds was the main character. Loni Anderson was in the movie for like ten minutes. Two times, both after the halfway point.

                  Whenever I come across a reviewer who has one of those points in the description, not the way it really happened, I disregard the review. Which is usually negative. Yeah, the movie has a lot of flaws and probably doesn't deserve five stars. I guess it may even deserve the 1 1/2 star you're giving it.

                  But when you talk like you're reviewing a movie you watched one time like ten years ago and only kinda remember it, I don't take anything you say seriously.


                  I go by this philosophy for most movies and reviewers, but this is the most prominent example in my life so I thought I'd share.
                  "So, my little Zillians... Have your fun, as long as I let you have fun... but don't forget who is the boss!"
                  We are contented, because he says we are
                  He really meant it when he says we've come so far

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                  • #10
                    *Some* of it may be having to review movies of a type you don't like. Even if you do keep your attention focused (as you ought to if being paid to watch) it seems like that would be all but impossible.
                    "My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by HYHYBT View Post
                      *Some* of it may be having to review movies of a type you don't like. Even if you do keep your attention focused (as you ought to if being paid to watch) it seems like that would be all but impossible.
                      That's probably true, but I wouldn't cut them any slack for it.
                      "So, my little Zillians... Have your fun, as long as I let you have fun... but don't forget who is the boss!"
                      We are contented, because he says we are
                      He really meant it when he says we've come so far

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                      • #12
                        I can't think of any times a movie reviewer has been factually wrong about a movie, but I will say that rather than anyone who gets paid to review the latest releases, the most reliable movie reviewers I know of (both in terms of being well-informed and me liking what they recommend) are Doug Walker and Howard Tayler.
                        "The hero is the person who can act mindfully, out of conscience, when others are all conforming, or who can take the moral high road when others are standing by silently, allowing evil deeds to go unchallenged." — Philip Zimbardo
                        TUA Games & Fiction // Ponies

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by KabeRinnaul View Post
                          I can't think of any times a movie reviewer has been factually wrong about a movie, but I will say that rather than anyone who gets paid to review the latest releases, the most reliable movie reviewers I know of (both in terms of being well-informed and me liking what they recommend)
                          Nostalgia Critic, Nostalgia Chick, and Blockbuster Buster are my current faves.
                          Last edited by jackfaire; 12-11-2011, 06:02 AM.
                          Jack Faire
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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
                            Then there always seems to be a handful of reviewers who will hail even the shittiest movie as totally awesome. Again making you wonder if they even watched the same movie. I guess they're quotefishing to get their name on the DVD cover.
                            Ever heard of film critic David Manning?

                            Originally posted by jackfaire View Post
                            Nostalgia Critic, Nostalgia Chick, and Blockbuster Buster are my current faves.
                            Love the Nostalgia Critic. Also love listening to the guys from Spill.com. Their 5 minute video reviews are funny, but they go into greater depth on what they like and don't like in their audio reviews (which tend to run between 25-40 minutes).

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                            • #15
                              I saw one reviewer who was confused by most of Van Helsing, didn't like that things were conveniently placed.

                              Things that were implied or where your average person would figure it out he was confused by however he felt he totally understood something that was never really explained.
                              Jack Faire
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