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Alita is one of the series of movies instilling into non thinking mind several concepts:
1. you want to be immortal - become a cyborg
2. you want to be powerful - become a cyborg
3. you need to dedicate your life to becoming a massacre type game champion
4. you do not need family and children
And so on. Those movies been around for quite some time. Sort of started with Imhotep...and keeps going and going. Another example is Her.
It is a damaging tool for human psyche. Forming wrong attitudes and desires.
Besides being completely moronic. Eating a sandwich? She does not have digestive tract. Speaking out a mouth? Has no lungs. Moronic....
IMHO, this movie already has generated negative feelings in me, from watching previews. Cameron is going to take a big hit in the wallet with this one, I predict.
Not interested.
Not entertaining.
Pass.
Saw it with my daughters today and loved it. I had a blast. I've been anticipating it for a long time and grew up with the manga. It is a spectacle. The effects and action sequences are phenomenal and never achieved in the way it was executed in this movie. It's mesmerizing to watch. The actress who plays Alita, Rosa Salazar, brings Alita to life and does an amazing job giving the character nuance and layers. I absolutely adored her character, and her manga/anime look is beautifully realized.
Now, I *get* that many of the critics felt the story not living up to the grand spectacle. It looks like a James Cameron movie. And it even feels like one in its world-building and the lead characters, but it also feels like the studio took some control in the story and made changes. The manga is very violent, and while this movie has its pg-13 violence, it was definitely toned down to get the pg-13 rating to appeal to a wider audience. The story rewrites had to appease the studio because a studio is not going to invest 200 million into a film with an R rating given it's more difficult to see a return on investment when a huge chunk of the target audience is left out.
While the folks who are most familiar with Alita are adults, they're hinting at making this a trilogy and they want to attract a wide demographic. So the story doesn't quite have the James Cameron feel in its direction and feels a bit more YA with James Cameron SPX and spectacle. Some of the dialogue between Alita and her love interest is cheesy in the beginning, but given the attempt to attract the YA crowd, it hits those typical beats. I think their interaction gets better as the story progresses. I know some critics are bothered by its lack of a proper ending. It leaves things open for a sequel or two, but I didn't feel that it took away from the overall experience. I genuinely enjoyed the characters and feel the story beats fit the typical YA formula, but I think if Cameron weren't busy with Avatar sequels, aspects of the narrative would rise to the heights of the Epic action, world-building, and SPX. I think if Cameron carried the entire movie, the studio might have been okay with it being a bit more serious. It doesn't quite address some of the philosophical issues addressed in, say, Ghost in the Shell, which felt more weighty in the issues it explores or in movies like Blade Runner. But I think the studio is attempting to appeal to a wider audience with its goal to make more movies.
I'm not sure if more are to come, based on box office performance, but I really hope they continue the story. I want to see more. As much as I enjoy Rodriguez's work, I think future installments would be best suited with a different director.
The movie did okay at the domestic box office, grossing $36.5 million domestically over four days.
However, the movie cost $170 million to make, and it may not even reach $100 million.
But overseas grosses are at $100 million and this doesn't include China and Japan, so in the end the movie may still be profitable. Is it enough to greenlight a sequel? Maybe.
Relatively decent, for "product." Obvious intent of building a franchise. The eyes are annoying, but not horribly so. Lots of cliches, recycled stuff (I thought I was watching a pastiche of "Battlebots" and the pod racers from SW I for a while), but the thing I ended up being most irritated with was the floating over-city that just sat there trying to look menacing with no more plot exposition than it was there and people had forgotten what held it up, like a giant belt buckle on Sidney Greenstreet.
The majority of people who saw this movie said that this movie is very good but I don't know if this movie will earn enough for the studio to make two more movies. Thoughts?
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