Justice League of America
- Téléfilm
- 1997
- 1h 26min
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn evil Weather Man intent on destroying New Metro City with a series of malevolent meteorological mishaps? Can the super-powered (and semi-employed) Justice League of America save the day? ... Tout lireAn evil Weather Man intent on destroying New Metro City with a series of malevolent meteorological mishaps? Can the super-powered (and semi-employed) Justice League of America save the day? Or will New Metro be drowned in a humongous tidal wave?An evil Weather Man intent on destroying New Metro City with a series of malevolent meteorological mishaps? Can the super-powered (and semi-employed) Justice League of America save the day? Or will New Metro be drowned in a humongous tidal wave?
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Tori Olafsdotter
- (as Kim Oja)
- …
- T.V. Repairman
- (as Nick De Mauro)
Avis à la une
Everthing was painful. From the trying costumes to the even more trying dialogues. The Interview bits were not even funny or interessting. I have read Justice League Comics. The characters and how they were portrayed reminded me or the same writting and acting quality as a baywatch episode. (And I don't watch those either)
BTW did I mention that the whole film was predictable as hell. Would have been nice to have a single moment that I didn't knew would happen minutes before. She freezing the wave. Tell me me this suprised you.
Miguel Ferrer turning out the way he was ~yawn~ (And I like the actor from Broken Badges)
aso...A waste of time.
Bad.
I am a comics collector. This movie did not have much to do with the comics that inspired it. If it had been based on Keith Giffen's run, where was the Blue Beetle? Where was the wacky humor? Why did they use a personality-amputated Guy Gardner as Green Lantern (whose costume, idiotically, was blue)? Why was the Flash (who wasn't in Giffen's run) such a bonehead?
The characters in this pilot acted like they virtually didn't like each other. Their costumes were pretty damn silly, esp. Atom's. The villain didn't seem to have any motivation. The story was semi-coherent, unengaging and holey (what was Arliss' project, that he kept trying to draw attention to?). Maybe I missed some details, I dunno. But that's because they were eminently missable.
Still, since there is such a lack of superhero movies around, I'll be generous and award this a 5 out of 10 rating.
Of course, changes had to be made to adapt it to TV, the budget and make it accessible to new viewers. But, this wasn't anything special. Basically, the movie is your typical 90s superhero TV fare with a predictable plot, cheesy costumes and only halfway decent acting. Basically, it was a buddy movie with powers.
The JLA characterizations are horrible. To catalog all of the mistakes would take more time than this awful show is worth. Just to name one good example: a couple of characters (Fire and Guy Gardner) who actually hate each other in the comics were said to have dated previously.
It appears that somebody tried to fool the audience into thinking they had seen a more exciting show than they really had: major action sequences were never shown but instead reported (sans footage) by the evening news.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe Green Lantern in this movie is a composite of three of the ring bearers, the classic Hal Jordan, modern Kyle Rayner and '80s-era Guy Gardner. Hal makes up the character's basic appearance, sans mask; Kyle makes up the mask, badge and wrist gauntlet; while the name and vest come from Guy.
- Citations
J'onn J'onnz: Your first alien I presume?
Tori Olafsdotter: I-I met Leonard Nimoy once.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Blockbuster Buster: The Unseen 13 (2011)