One of the most underrated actors ever.I’ve yet to see Kyle Chandler deliver a bad performance
Is this gonna be the usual modern story where the old white dude teach to the better in everything young black dude and get lectured by him?
I can soooo see that![]()
James Gunn is behind it. I doubt that.
And that's not a common trope, I don't think.
It could end up being the typical Morpheus and Neo situation, but I'm hoping it's more of a Lethal Weapon situation.Is this gonna be the usual modern story where the old white dude teach to the better in everything young black dude and get lectured by him?
I can soooo see that![]()
I have no faith in good storytelling from current marvel but i'm probably gonna watch it just for chandler.It could end up being the typical Morpheus and Neo situation, but I'm hoping it's more of a Lethal Weapon situation.
I have no faith in good storytelling from current marvel
So maybe there is hope, althought the last dc movie i saw was probably justice league and it was dogwater.Green Lantern is DC.
I can't imagine there will be a lot of 'generational" humor/discussion in the show, it's not like the Chandler character is super old or somehow removed from modern life. Maybe some "Ok, boomer" stuff but Kyle is only 60, so I'm not sure it would play well.It could end up being the typical Morpheus and Neo situation, but I'm hoping it's more of a Lethal Weapon situation.
Men in Black is actually closer to the thing you're describing that you don't want, that's why I think Lethal Weapon 1 would be a better way to go about it instead. Instead of a mentor/student situation, Riggs and Murtaugh were essentially equals but had their own ways of doing police work. They learned over time to respect, compromise, and trust each other to get the job done.I'd much rather there be mutual respect from the get-go and there not be any culture or generational clashing. Stick to Stewart having to learn alien mannerisms or something rather than Jordan being taught to twerk, how to tweet, or navigate a rastafarian drug den or whatever. Basically Men in Black with a less jokey Will Smith character and more empathetic Agent K.
I saw the black guy in some movie and he had that superhero look over him. Very good casting choice.
Men in Black is actually closer to the thing you're describing that you don't want, that's why I think Lethal Weapon 1 would be a better way to go about it instead. Instead of a mentor/student situation, Riggs and Murtaugh were essentially equals but had their own ways of doing police work. They learned over time to respect, compromise, and trust each other to get the job done.
While that's mostly true, you're forgetting a lot of scenes where Will's character was acting in an arrogant or brash manner, and would even insult K and K's boss at times. J had a character growth arc which is why he was much more relatable in the end. Even from me saying all of this, I don't dislike any of what we just brought up, as that's something you have to contend with since you dislike it lol.I dunno, in MiB most of the humor (and i'm not sure this Lantern show is a comedy or not) was about the "newcomer" dealing with alien stuff.
I'm torn about this. I think there are two ways to treat this: As a detective movie first and foremost with bits of lore and exposition from the case and environment itself that drives the plot forward (which was the James Gunn pitch for it way back when he revealed his whole DCU plan), or the typical 'starter hero' audience surrogate.You need that newcomer to be the audience surrogate and ask questions, so I gotta think Stewart is going to be new to the Corps, if not recruited in the first ep, so he can be the set up for exposition. No way they can have two relatively experienced Lanterns because then they can't do info dumps for the lore (unless there is a local cop lady involved as well).
If the Lantern aspects are relatively light (he isn't/can't using the ring to open his bottle of beer, there are no big ring assisted fights with tentacled aliens, the lantern recharge/oath only comes up once or twice) then I think you are correct, they can sprinkle it in almost like an episode of x-files. But even if this is happening in a world where the DC hero pantheon is in full swing already it's hard to imagine they won't need to explain how the Corps works. A local lady cop makes the most sense I suppose, and they will feel a strong need to have women talking in the show. I'm trying to remember how Peacemaker handled it. Wallers daughter was kinda the audience stand in IIRC.While that's mostly true, you're forgetting a lot of scenes where Will's character was acting in an arrogant or brash manner, and would even insult K and K's boss at times. J had a character growth arc which is why he was much more relatable in the end. Even from me saying all of this, I don't dislike any of what we just brought up, as that's something you have to contend with since you dislike it lol.
I'm torn about this. I think there are two ways to treat this: As a detective movie first and foremost with bits of lore and exposition from the case and environment itself that drives the plot forward (which was the James Gunn pitch for it way back when he revealed his whole DCU plan), or the typical 'starter hero' audience surrogate.
I'm hoping for the former as I always enjoy movies more when I'm simply put into a world with a bunch of questions and theories about how it works, rather than all of it's concepts being overly explained to me. It tends to work well with sci-fi the most.
This is why I'm hoping that Guy Gardner explains just enough about the lantern corps in this upcoming Superman movie to save us from too much exposition in the GL movie.If the Lantern aspects are relatively light (he isn't/can't using the ring to open his bottle of beer, there are no big ring assisted fights with tentacled aliens, the lantern recharge/oath only comes up once or twice) then I think you are correct, they can sprinkle it in almost like an episode of x-files. But even if this is happening in a world where the DC hero pantheon is in full swing already it's hard to imagine they won't need to explain how the Corps works. A local lady cop makes the most sense I suppose, and they will feel a strong need to have women talking in the show. I'm trying to remember how Peacemaker handled it. Wallers daughter was kinda the audience stand in IIRC.
Wait, is this a TV show or a movie?This is why I'm hoping that Guy Gardner explains just enough about the lantern corps in this upcoming Superman movie to save us from too much exposition in the GL movie.
Actually I forget myself. If it's a TV show, then they can definitely do a slow burn with this stuff instead of frontloading the audience with information.Wait, is this a TV show or a movie?
I don't think it requires that much explanation for "We're space cops. Chosen for our strong will to control the ring. We humans protect Earth. Some alien shit is going on and we gotta figure it out" but thats rarely how modern shows leave it. An 80's/90's buddy cop show would have all this explained by the intro theme song
"He was a space cop, and good at his job. But he committed the ultimate sin—and testified against other space cops gone bad. Space Cops that tried to kill him, but got the woman he loved instead. Framed for murder, now he prowls the badlands...an outlaw hunting outlaws...a bounty hunter...a LANTERN"![]()
I'm hoping this show turns out good
I haven't any Green Lantern comics yet but his concept always was interesting to me
Geoff Johns’ Green Lantern run and Peter J Tomasi’s Green Lantern Corps run that ran together are awesome. Honestly, GL is usually considered Johns’ best (who is generally a very solid writer), the only ones from him that are said to match it are his original JSA run (which I need to read) and 52 (which is awesome, though that was a four man group project in terms of writing).
Just note the first arc, Green Lantern: Rebirth, does follow up a previous story from years prior to it, where Hal Jordan lost his mind to grief due to an extreme tragedy, called himself Parallex, and became a villain before dying. Rebirth explains how Hal returns to life and that his fall to villainy wasn’t actually something he had control over thus making him a hero once more.
Also the final issues of the two runs are generally considered an extremely satisfying “ending” (though obviously the characters’ stories continued past this) for those who don’t want to commit to a ton of issues (though these two runs each lasted roughly nine years, so still a lot of issues to read regardless).
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I hope so too.I'm hoping this show turns out good
I haven't read any Green Lantern comics yet but his concept always was interesting to me
Same, but I do remember a very famously funny comic panel around Batman and GL arguing.I'm hoping this show turns out good
I haven't read any Green Lantern comics yet but his concept always was interesting to me
Same, but I do remember a very famously funny comic panel around Batman and GL arguing.
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His drink was also lemonade.
I hope so too.
My reaction gif was more about how it's literally a nothingburger, just a picture of two regular dudes in regular clothes one of them sporting a green ring that's not even in clear view that's supposed to tease a superhero show but hell DC has been on a streak of terrible first looks so it's to be expected I guess.
Same, but I do remember a very famously funny comic panel around Batman and GL arguing.
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His drink was also lemonade.
Clear eyes, full hearts, can't lose.Kyle Chandler's hair is outstanding, as is his acting.
This looks great.
It's why Tom Cruise turned it down because he won't do a movie where his character dies.
More like he didn't want to die in a film that might cut him out of lucrative sequels.![]()
Tom Cruise has played several characters in films that have died.
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Tom Cruise has played several characters in films that have died.
Same, but I do remember a very famously funny comic panel around Batman and GL arguing.
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His drink was also lemonade.
I'm hoping this show turns out good
I haven't read any Green Lantern comics yet but his concept always was interesting to me
Damn you and your lemonade!
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Geoff Johns' run is good, at least up until the Sinestro Corps War or maybe Blackest Night. After that, they get way too into all the rainbow ring stuff which lost me eventually.
As a Grant Morrison fanboy, I'm legally obligated to to recommend his run as well. It leans very heavily into the "space cop" concept.