We've all been there - a movie gets insane hype, everyone's talking about it, critics are raving... and then you watch it and feel completely let down. What are your biggest cinematic disappointment stories?
For me, "Avatar" was the ultimate letdown. The visuals were impressive but the story was just "Dances with Wolves" in space. The characters were cardboard cutouts and the dialogue was cringeworthy. Another one is "The Last Jedi" - as a Star Wars fan, I felt like it completely misunderstood what made the franchise special.
I'm curious to hear about movies that didn't live up to hype for you. These are the kinds of movie hot takes that make for interesting film discussion forums conversations.
The Matrix Resurrections" was my biggest recent cinematic disappointment story. The original is one of my favorite films, but the new one felt like a cynical cash grab that didn't understand what made the first film special. The meta commentary about reboots was interesting for about five minutes, then it just became annoying.
Another is "Dune" (2021). The visuals are stunning, but it's only half a movie. The character development is minimal, and it ends just when things are getting interesting. I understand it's part one, but it should still work as a complete viewing experience.
These movies that didn't live up to hype moments are always disappointing.
Game of Thrones" season 8 if we're including TV, but for movies, "Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker" was incredibly disappointing. It felt like they were course-correcting from the previous film without any coherent plan. The pacing is frantic, the plot makes no sense, and it undermines everything that came before.
Also, "The Hobbit" trilogy. Turning a relatively short book into three bloated movies was a mistake. The CGI overload and added storylines diluted what should have been a simple, charming adventure.
These cinematic disappointment stories are important for movie discussion forums because they help manage expectations for future releases.
Tenet" for me. Nolan is one of my favorite directors, but that film was a mess. The sound mixing made half the dialogue incomprehensible, the characters were cardboard cutouts, and the time inversion concept was explained so poorly that I spent the whole movie confused rather than engaged.
Another is "The Batman." Three hours long and it feels every minute of it. The pacing is glacial, the "mystery" is obvious from the start, and Robert Pattinson's Batman has zero charisma. I was so excited for this but left the theater bored.
These movie hot takes about disappointing films are cathartic to share.