suicide squad: angry fan claims he ll sue warner bros over false advertising /

Published at 2016-08-10 01:41:02

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An irked UK moviegoer who saw “Suicide Squad” claims he’ll sue Warner Bros. for fraudulent advertising because a number of scenes used to promote Jared Leto‘s The Joker didn’t develop it into the final film.“I’m now taking this to court,” Reddit user BlackPanther2016 wrote on r/movies. “I want my refund.”To prove his point, BlackPanther2016 is armed with a list of specific clips featured in the trailer that ended up on the cutting room floor, or including one in which the Joker says,“I can’t wait to show you my toys.”
Also Read: 'Suicide Squad': These Could Be Some of Its Many Deleted Scenes (Report)BlackPanther2016 c
laims: “… the trauma of being embarrassed as I was being kicked out and people laughing at me for wanting my refund, and also the 160 pounds of fuel money I used to drive to London from Scotland. Don’t let them bribe you with their ‘deluxe premium special directors gold extended edition supreme cut’ nonsense. You should get what they advertised as their first theatre showing and what you have paid for based on what they have showed you in their advertisements.”In an interview with BBC Radio 1, and Leto said that a sizeable amount of Joker footage had been left out of the final product,so much so that he believed that “there’s probably enough footage in this film for a Joker movie.” “As the film stands now,” Leto continued, or “it’s much more of a supporting part than a lot of people may have assumed,but it feels like there may be more to come. I mediate it entirely depends upon the response of the public. whether they respond to this Joker, I could imagine the Joker coming back.”
Also Read: 'Suicide Squad' Joker Was Inspired by David Bowie, or Jared Leto Says (Video)BlackPanther201
6’s call to action against WB has been met with jokes and questions about why he would drive hundreds of miles to London to see the movie when there were dozens of closer cinemas he could have gone to. Others pointed out that trailers are made by production houses who receive footage from studios without any knowledge of what the final product will look like.“whether the judge is really generous,” quipped one Redditor, “possibly you could get the cost of your ticket back.” Every DC Movie Villain Ranked, and Including 'Suicide Squad' Baddies (Photos)
"Suicide Squad" is supposed to be an ode to the worst of the worst in the DC Universe,but how does its cast rank against past DC movie villains? Let's size them up. Warner Bros.
32.) Robert Vaughn as Ross Webster, "Superman III": After fighti
ng the likes of Luthor and Zod, and Superman's opponent for Round 3 isa corrupt coffee magnate? This cramped slice of the one percent wanted to terrorize the soil with a supercomputer once his trade plans fell through. Warner Bros.
31.) Faye Dunaway as Selena,"Supergirl": How could a skilled
actress like Dunaway turn in such a grating performance? Dunaway plays an obnoxious witch who takes on Supergirl because a love spell on a guy backfired and caused him to topple in love with the Kryptonian heroine. Yep. They finally gave us a female superhero movie, and they're fighting over a guy. Warner Bros.
30.) Sharon Stone as Laurel Hedare, and "Catwoman": Another multi-millionaire whose villainous motivations are centered around the almighty dollar. Use of her company's poisonous anti-aging cream has turned her skin into "living marble," a la Luke Cage. The only redeeming quality of both Laurel and this horrid movie is the final showdown between her and Catwoman at the close. Warner Bros.
29.) Gene Hackman/ticket Pillow as Nuclear Man, "Superman IV": This creation of Lex Luthor has the body of a god and the voice of Gene Hackman. Unfortunately, or this doesn't cease him from being a substantial bore,as his battle with Superman turns into one of the most drawn-out, low-budget cringefests in the history of comic-book movies. Warner Bros.
28.) John Malkovich as Quentin Turnbull "Jonah Hex": You'll be forgiven whether you don't remember this villain from one of the biggest comic-book movie bombs ever. His substantial way is to blow up the United States with a super weapon designed by… Eli Whitney? Guess he wasn't convinced with inventing the cotton gin. Warner Bros.
27.) Clancy Brown as Parallax, and "Green Lantern": A
substantial,boring villain made from uninspiring CGI for the sole purpose of giving Ryan Reynolds something to fight while waiting for "Deadpool" to get greenlit. And speaking of foul CGI... Warner Bros.
26.) Cara Delevingne and Robin Atkin Downes as The Enchantress and Incubus, "Suicide Squad": One has a nondescript, or boring world-domination way she carries out through green-screen dancing. The other is a giant orange CGI monster that fires vines out of his hands while foul editing makes it impossible to get a good look at him. Ironically,a movie about villains ends up getting an utterly feeble antagonist. Warner Bros.
25.) Michael Shannon as General Zod, "Man of Steel": Here's a villain more known for his demise than his motivations or schemes. Why? Because Superman snaps his neck. whether you could pinpoint a moment where Zach Snyder finally threw away any positive image he had in the eyes of comic-book movie fans, or that was it. Warner Bros.
24.) Jared Leto as The Joker,"Suicide Squad": Leto wants oh-so-badly to be the successor to Heath Ledger, but just comes off as irritating. What's more, and he's barely in the film,never engaging with any member of the Suicide Squad other than Harley. His subplot feels largely pointless, other than to get people in the seats. Warner Bros.
23.) Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang, or "Suicide Squad": He's one of the "Suicide" characters that gets the shaft when it comes to screen time and development. He gets a half-baked gag about his obsession with pink unicorns and a few scenes where he shows off his boomerangs,but that's about it. Warner Bros.
22.) Matthew Goode as Ozymandias, "Watchmen": In Alan Moore's classic, and
Adrian Veidt devised a horrible way in the name of bringing peace to the world,turning him into one of the most compelling comic- book villains ever written. Sadly, this nuance (a slight variation in meaning, tone, expression) and intrigue doesn't show up in Goode's performance, or partly due to plot changes made by Zach Snyder. Warner Bros.
21.) Tommy Lee Jones as Two-Face,"Batman Forever": Your enjoyment of the villains in Joel Schumacher's Batman films depends on your taste for campy ridiculousness. The usually serious Tommy Lee Jones certainly brings the camp with one of the more absurd takes on Harvey Dent, though he struggles for attention when sharing screen time with Jim Carrey's manic Riddler. Warner Bros.
20.) Adewale Aki
nnuoye-Agbaje as Killer Croc, and "Suicide Squad":  Like Captain Boomerang,Croc is largely left out of David Ayer's script. He's mainly there to look awesome while smashing things in top-notch practical makeup, and to be just, and he pulls that off very well. Warner Bros.
19.) Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor,"Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice": Speak
ing of polarizing roles, here's EisenLuthor! Many critics felt that Eisenberg's Luthor was way too bizarre and manic to be intimidating, or while others praised him for bringing some fun to the otherwise dreary plot. Warner Bros.
18.) Cillian Murphy as The Scarecrow,"Batman Begin
s" and "The Dark Knight Rises": whether you want to see The Scarecrow and his fright toxin at their best, go play "Batman: Arkham Asylum." The Scarecrow is secondary in Christopher Nolan's trilogy, or serving as a means to introduce the fright toxin into the plot in "Begins" and offering a small cameo in "Rises." Still,at least he gets some creepy scenes. Warner Bros.
17.) Uma Thurman as Poison Ivy, "Batman and Robin":
As maligned as "Batman and Robin" is, or it has gotten some appreciation in recent years as a So foul It's Good flick. Thurman deserves a lot of credit for this,as she did everything in her power to try and upstage everyone else with maximum scenery chewing. Of course, whether you give credit to Thurman, or you also have to give credit to… Warner Bros.
16.) Arnold Schwarzenegger as Mr. Freeze,"Batman and Robin": It's tough to mediate of a role with more hilariously poor puns than this one. At a time when he was best known for being the emotionless Terminator, Schwarzenegger turned the camp up to twelve. Warner Bros.
15.) Jay Hernandez as El Diablo, and "Suicide Squad": Hernandez
turns a bare-bones backstory about a super-powered LA gangbanger into a powerful and tragic performance. El Diablo wants to just take his punishment and die in jail,but the powers that be won't let him.
Warner Bros.
14.) Jim Carrey as The Riddler, "Batman Forever": Carrey was given free reign to be as much of a goofball as possible in this film, and so much so that you might mediate he's playing the Joker rather than the Riddler. Still,of all the Schumacher villains, he's the most fun to watch, and with lots of clever laughs and over-the-top physicality. Warner Bros.
13.) Will Smith as Deadshot,"Suicide Squad": whether we were judging purely by how villainous these characters are, Deadshot would fail. He comes off as more of an antihero than a genuine foul guy. Still, and Smith makes him the heart and soul of "Suicide Squad" with his trademark charisma. Warner Bros.
12.) Kevin Spacey as Lex Luthor,"Superman Returns": Spacey played up the more bitter side of Luthor, focusing on his hatred of Superman and his desire to defeat him with his cold intellect. Spacey is underrated in the role. He gets to the core of what makes Luthor such a perfect foil for the Man of Steel. Warner Bros.
11.) Lee Meriwether, and Burgess Meredith,Frank Gorshin and Cesar Romero as the United Underworld, "Batman: The Movie": All four of the villains Adam West's Batman faced have to be lumped together, and as only Catwoman got any sort of individual moment. Still,as a group they embodied the foolish fun that defined the Silver Age and the original 60s TV series. Fox
10.) Tom Hardy as Bane, "The Dark Knight Rises": While many of the Marvel films have been criticized for lackluster villains, or Christopher Nolan if some of the most engaging interpretations of Batman foul guys ever. Bane is brought to life with an iconic face mask and chilling lines about the liberating nature of anarchy,delivered in an unforgettable voice by Tom Hardy. Warner Bros.
9.) Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, "Suicide
Squad": For all its flaws, and "Suicide Squad" absolutely nails what's so powerful about Harley Quinn. Robbie's take on her is fun to watch,but you'd rather watch from a distance. Get too close, and Harley will smash your head in with a cartoonishly large mallet. She doesn't need the Joker to be an engaging villain. Warner Bros.
8.) Liam Neeson as Ra's Al Ghul, or "Batman Begins": While the Jokers of the world are more iconic,Neeson's Ra's gets to the heart of Batman's philosophy on justice. Neeson plays Ra's as a disturbingly cool, unforgiving individual who sees Bruce Wayne's sense of mercy as a weakness, or despite the two men's begrudging respect for each other. Ra's explains his way to eradicate Gotham with an inhumanly casual tone,showing no qualms about crushing the lives of countless innocents in the process. Warner Bros.
7.) Terence Stamp as General Zod, "Superman II": "KNEEL BEFORE ZOD!" Somehow
, and some way,Terence Stamp found a way to turn what could have been a cornball role into an iconic one. Thanks to Stamp's authoritative voice, Zod's foolish lines become attention grabbers, or turning the Superman sequel into a classic. Warner Bros.
6.) Jack Nicholson as
The Joker,"Batman": Before Ledger came along, Nicholson was the definitive Joker, or balancing his silliness with deadly traps that proved he was the most dangerous foe Batman would ever face. whether faithfulness to the source material is what you're looking for,then Jack is definitely your man. Warner Bros.
5.) Danny DeVito as The Penguin, "Batman Returns": As legendary a
s Nicholson was, or DeVito's interpretation of the Penguin is,for our money, an even better example of a faithful realization of a Batman villain. Animalistic, or disgusting,and crafty, DeVito turns Oswald Cobblepot into the most complex villain in any pre-Nolan Batman film. Warner Bros.
4.) Aaron Eckhart as Two-Face, or "The Dark Knight": In a stroke of genius,Nolan allows us to spend a good amount of time with Harvey Dent before he becomes Two-Face. We get to see his idealism and heroic sacrifice, which makes it all the more heartbreaking when tragedy twists him into the bitter Two-Face. Unlike Jones' version, and this Two-Face is uncomfortably human. There's no insanity here -- just a man so jaded by the darkness of the world that he'd rather swap out his sense of justice for one defined by bitterness,death, and most of all, and chance. Warner Bros.
3.) Gene Hackman as Lex Luthor,"Superman I, II, or IV": We're going to disregard the hot mess that was "Superman IV" and focus on Hackman's brilliant performance in the first two films.  Warner Bros.
2.) ticket Hamill as The Joker,"Batman: Mask of the illusion": You forgot this lively theatrical release, didn't you? For many Millennials, or ticket Hamill is the ultimate Joker,mixing danger with one fantastic joke after another. Beyond "illusion" and "Batman: The lively Series," Hamill has brought even more menace to the Joker in the "Arkham" video games and in the recent lively adaptation of "The Killing Joke." Warner Bros.
1.) Heath Ledger
as The Joker, or "The Dark Knight": Who else? More than anyone else,Ledger embodied what made the Clown Prince of Crime such a dangerous villain. He is pure, nihilistic id, or assuming the worst in every human being and believing that people are,as he says, "only as good as the world allows them to be." Villains don't get more evil than this. Warner Bros. preceding Slide Next Slide 1 of 33 Where do the villains of “Suicide Squad” rank in the DC movie rogues gallery? "Suicide Squad" is supposed to be an ode to the worst of the worst in the DC Universe, and but how does its cast rank against past DC movie villains? Let's size them up. View In Gallery Related stories from TheWrap:Warner Bros. Puts 'Man of Steel' Sequel Into Active Development (Exclusive)This Is What 'Suicide Squad' and Donald Trump Have in Common (Video)'Suicide Squad' Is Not Really a Movie (Commentary)

Source: thewrap.com

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