Saw it today. I paid 14.50€ (19.26 USD) for the 3D show, does that sound a lot? I decided to go to see it as my gf wanted to go out with her friend for little shopping, so what a better way to spend the time waiting for them?
3D didn't offer much for the movie, which I think is positive. So the movie could just as well be watched in 2D theaters.
The mechs were big and majestetic, which was nice.
Action sequences were too "busy", sometimes it was a bit hard to tell what was happening on the screen. The big aliens always screamed first at the robot, then they roll together through buildings and such, lots of explosions etc. Who is winning now? Oh, the robot is now missing an arm, but I bet he will win anyway with one arm.
As expected, the story and drama were ultra-classic. All story elements were borrowed from e.g. Top Gun, Independence Day etc. etc. etc., you could easily tell beforehand who would die and who not, and so on and so forth:
An antagonist hotshot pilot who first hates the protagonist and doesn't trust him, but later learns to respect him? Check.
The protagonist(s) making some mistake and being put on the side while others go save the world, but suddenly becoming humanity's only shot? Check.
Someone sacrificing his life to help his fellow soldiers? Check.
It takes one decisive blow to a critical weak point to foil all alien plans? Check.
I dunno, I wasn't expecting more from it, but I was still being kinda hopeful. In vain. I guess they always have to make big compromises for AAA blockbuster movies so that as many as possible would go to see it, and also as the movie was rated here to be suitable for 12 years old kids.
I guess the best movies are the ones who inconveniently mix genres or story items, like Robocop was just not a movie about a robot cop which gets the bad guys, or Alien was not just a space movie where humans fight bad aliens (but rather a horror movie in space).
That reminds me: is it so that nowadays the movie studios don't make straight movie license games anymore, as in "Pacific Rim: The Game" where you'd basically play the movie's story through? That used to be quite normal in the old days, every blockbuster movie got a movie tie-in game.
In a way that's a good thing, I rather see games being developed independently on their own, and not just some kind of extension to movies. At worst, we get games which are placed in some movie's universe (like Star Wars), but not related directly to any particular movie. Or am I just missing them?
Post edited August 04, 2013 by timppu