JABQ04 said:
Less than a month to go! Other than Star Wars this is the only movie I've wanted to see this year.
I'm not sure how it could do nothing for you, unless you generally don't enjoy good war movies.ViralAg said:
The Dark Knight Rises was a miss on a number of levels, and Interstellar was a smaller miss but still a miss. The Nolan mystique from the era of Inception and The Dark Knight has worn off for a lot of people, myself included. I wouldn't be at all surprised if Dunkirk debuted low.
Personally, the most recent trailers did nothing for me, and I don't understand the comical fanboyish reaction to them in this thread. If Dunkirk gets good marks and people I trust tell me it's worth seeing, I might check it out after a couple of weeks.
TDKR was only a miss because Heath Ledger could not reprise his Joker role, at least that's my opinion. I thought it was a great movie, and still enjoy watching it. I consider Interstellar to be among the 3-4 greatest science fiction movies I have ever seen. To each his own, I guess.ViralAg said:
The Dark Knight Rises was a miss on a number of levels, and Interstellar was a smaller miss but still a miss. The Nolan mystique from the era of Inception and The Dark Knight has worn off for a lot of people, myself included. I wouldn't be at all surprised if Dunkirk debuted low.
Personally, the most recent trailers did nothing for me, and I don't understand the comical fanboyish reaction to them in this thread. If Dunkirk gets good marks and people I trust tell me it's worth seeing, I might check it out after a couple of weeks.
aTmAg said:
I think all 3 Dark Knights were good, and that Interstellar was Nolan's only miss. It had too many big plot loopholes and the whole library in the black hole thing was awkward.
I worry a little bit about Dunkirk being boring. But I'll watch it in the theaters nevertheless.
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There has to be a good explanation for that, because all I can think of are not good: nervous studio demanding cuts, nervous studio worried about box office (showings per day), not a strong enough script, etc. I would think that Nolan could get pretty much any length he wanted from a studio...especially a prestige WWII movie like this.
I'll give Nolan the benefit of the doubt, but this short run time is very, very unusual and a little worrisome.
I wouldn't quite call it "surrounded." Yes, Spidey and Apes will no doubt overshadow it in the lead-up, but after/on the 21st (Dunkirk's release date), there's really not a whole lot of competition. It's basically Valerian, Atomic Blonde, The Dark Tower, and Detroit in the two weeks after, and then the rest of August is pretty dry. If Dunkirk is good - or hopefully even great - it will have legs through all of August and likely even into September (another relatively dry month). If I were Warner Bros. I'd definitely want to release at the tail end of summer with a couple months to coast rather than try to compete amongst the Thor - Justice League - Last Jedi trifecta strategically scattered over the final two months of the year, not to mention all the Oscar fare that will be hitting during those months as well.Quad Dog said:
Why is this movie opening in the summer surrounded by huge event movies? Just feels like it could easily get lost. I think it would do much better opening in November.
Furlock Bones said:
Dunkirk 70 mm tickets link not working.
GiveEmHellBill said:
1:47 for a WWII movie directed by Nolan makes me very nervous.
As someone else said above, I was expecting 2:47, not sub-2 hours. Hell, that's shorter than almost every Marvel movie. There has to be a good explanation for that, because all I can think of are not good: nervous studio demanding cuts, nervous studio worried about box office (showings per day), not a strong enough script, etc. I would think that Nolan could get pretty much any length he wanted from a studio...especially a prestige WWII movie like this.
I'll give Nolan the benefit of the doubt, but this short run time is very, very unusual and a little worrisome.