Battleship Trailer


Acemace

 

Posted

"B-6." "A hit! And my favorite vitamin, I might add."


 

Posted

That seems to be a smashing Naval movie... haven't seen a good battleship....fight since WWII movies



"My life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely pretty and well preserved, but rather I will skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming...WOW...What a Ride"

 

Posted

Ok, based on the thought that it is based on the game, the trailer looks dramatically better than I expected. It could still be a horrible movie but it could be very very fun to.

You sank my Battleship!


But it's MY sadistic mechanical monster and I'm here to make sure it knows it. - Girl Genius

List of Invention Guides

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr_NoBody View Post
That seems to be a smashing Naval movie... haven't seen a good battleship....fight since WWII movies
In no small part because they were decommissioned, well, shortly after WW2.

$200M (number shown in linked article) for Battleship is jaw dropping. Also - Liam Neeson likes cashing checks. I don't blame him, but he seems to be closer to Nick Cage than Daniel Day Lewis for how selective he is.


Global = Hedgefund (or some derivation thereof)

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Deacon_NA View Post
In no small part because they were decommissioned, well, shortly after WW2.
For values of "shortly after" that include 1992, anyway...

Quote:
Liam Neeson likes cashing checks. I don't blame him, but he seems to be closer to Nick Cage than Daniel Day Lewis for how selective he is.
I think of him as more akin to greats like Michael Caine and Christopher Lee, neither of whom have ever let the possibility that a movie might suck dissuade them from taking the job.


 

Posted

Well that looks terrible.


Current Published Arcs
#1 "Too Drunk to be Alcoholic" Arc #48942
#2 "To Slay Sleeping Dragons" Arc #111486
#3 "Stop Calling Me"

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Captain_Photon View Post
I think of him as more akin to greats like Michael Caine and Christopher Lee, neither of whom have ever let the possibility that a movie might suck dissuade them from taking the job.
And like Michael Caine and Christopher Lee, as opposed to Nick Cage, the involvement of Liam Neeson always makes a movie better. Doesn't necessarily make 'em great, but better.

Also, Daniel Day Lewis is ridiculously overrated.


- CaptainFoamerang

Silverspar on Kelly Hu: A face that could melt paint off the wall *shivers*
Someone play my AE arc! "The Heart of Statesman" ID: 343405

 

Posted

Looks like a big ol' pile of Meh to me.


Goodbye, I guess.

@Lord_Nightblade in Champions/Star Trek Online

nightblade7295@gmail.com if you want to stay in touch

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Captain_Photon View Post
For values of "shortly after" that include 1992, anyway...


1955

http://www.navy.mil/navydata/ships/b...ps/bb-list.asp

If that's incorrect please let the navy.mil website know.

On closer inspection of the "disposition" column I see ships that were recommissioned later than what the "decommissioned" column states. Not sure why they wouldn't put the most recent dates in. Whatever.


Global = Hedgefund (or some derivation thereof)

 

Posted

That looks mildly interesting, if it wasn't based on the Battleship game... of which it looks nothing like.

confuzzled.


City of Heroes was my first MMO, & my favorite computer game.

R.I.P.
Chyll - Bydand - Violynce - Enyrgos - Rylle - Nephryte - Solyd - Fettyr - Hyposhock - Styrling - Beryllos - Rosyc
Horryd - Myriam - Dysquiet - Ghyr
Vanysh - Eldrytch
Inflyct - Mysron - Orphyn - Dysmay - Reapyr - - Wyldeman - Hydeous

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Deacon_NA View Post
1955

http://www.navy.mil/navydata/ships/b...ps/bb-list.asp

If that's incorrect please let the navy.mil website know.
The U.S. Navy's WWII-vintage Iowa-class battleships were modernized and recommissioned in the '80s as part of the Reagan-era "600-ship navy", then put out to pasture again in 1991-92, when it became clear that the Soviet Union had been perfectly capable of destroying itself without the Navy's help. Entertainingly, though they're not in commission and are being converted into museum ships now, they're still being kept on the books in some nebulous bureaucratic state of readiness-for-readiness, just in case we should suddenly happen to need a decisive advantage in a re-enactment of the Battle of Jutland. Or be invaded by aliens, I suppose, as we see here.

Why the Navy's website should choose not to reflect this I couldn't say, though one wonders cynically whether it might have something to do with the brass hoping people will forget about that disgraceful episode in 1990 wherein one of those ships suffered a serious accidental explosion and the Navy tried to blame it on one of the dead sailors being - hmm, I bet I can't say that on this board - Not Quite the Thing. (This was both irrelevant and, as it turned out, untrue.)


 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chyll View Post
That looks mildly interesting, if it wasn't based on the Battleship game... of which it looks nothing like.
Aw, it does, though! Check out those peg-shaped alien missile things and that aerial shot at the end. Someone tried really hard to make those bits have a Battleship flavor. Which is very silly, but then, it looks like it's supposed to be a pretty silly movie, so it's all good.


 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nos482 View Post
What the...?!
What´s next? Tic Tac Toe: The Musical?
Stop giving them ideas!


Arc# 92382 -- "The S.P.I.D.E.R. and the Tyrant" -- Ninjas! Robots! Praetorians! It's totally epic! Play it now!

Arc # 316340 -- "Husk" -- Azuria loses something, a young woman harbors a dark secret, and the fate of the world is in your hands.

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Captain_Photon View Post
The U.S. Navy's WWII-vintage Iowa-class battleships were modernized and recommissioned in the '80s as part of the Reagan-era "600-ship navy", then put out to pasture again in 1991-92, when it became clear that the Soviet Union had been perfectly capable of destroying itself without the Navy's help. Entertainingly, though they're not in commission and are being converted into museum ships now, they're still being kept on the books in some nebulous bureaucratic state of readiness-for-readiness, just in case we should suddenly happen to need a decisive advantage in a re-enactment of the Battle of Jutland. Or be invaded by aliens, I suppose, as we see here.
They tend to be very useful still in some instances. Those shells cause *quite* a bit of damage when they land, after all, and are a tad harder to shoot down or otherwise disrupt than, say, a cruise missile (which, IIRC, they had also been updated to launch.)

They're essentially amphibious assault support. Very heavy support. (I believe the Wisconsin is one of the ones kept in or near readiness. Or was. Rather surprisingly, given historical significance, they pulled Missouri out for use during the first Gulf war.)


 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainFoamerang View Post
Also, Daniel Day Lewis is ridiculously overrated.
I dunno, Daniel Michael Blake Day-Lewis (crap this guy has a long name) seems to be the go to guy for mustache twirling bad guys.



------->"Sic Semper Tyrannis"<-------

 

Posted

Ok.

Um...

Whaaaat?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Nos482 View Post
What´s next? Tic Tac Toe: The Musical?
No, I think next up is Candyland.

Wonder if anyone will be doing a 5-hour movie of Monopoly?


Est sularis oth Mithas

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Memphis_Bill View Post
They tend to be very useful still in some instances. Those shells cause *quite* a bit of damage when they land, after all, and are a tad harder to shoot down or otherwise disrupt than, say, a cruise missile (which, IIRC, they had also been updated to launch.)

They're essentially amphibious assault support. Very heavy support.
Well, OK, I'll grant you that, although last time I checked we didn't really have re-enacting the Normandy invasion on the to-do list either, particularly since we've lately developed the interesting habit of only getting into fights with landlocked or near-landlocked countries. But hey! That could change. We might stop fooling around with these desert nowheres and go after North Korea someday. They've got a coast.

I'll tell you what, one of those old girls would sure give those Somali pirates an unusual day at the office. 9x16"/50-caliber naval rifles: 1, Zodiac full of AK-47-toting speed freaks: 0.


 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Arnabas View Post
Wonder if anyone will be doing a 5-hour movie of Monopoly?
Only five hours? That'd be the television edit.


 

Posted

Well they came in handy during the first Gulf War launching cruse missiles as well as using their big guns.

As for the fact they are on standby, you can't jam, cause a premature detonation or easily deflect 1.2 metric tons of metal tossed over 20+ miles. Who knows when it's unique abilities could come in handy again?

Also hasn't Space Battleship Yamato taught us nothing?


Father Xmas - Level 50 Ice/Ice Tanker - Victory
$725 and $1350 parts lists --- My guide to computer components

Tempus unum hominem manet

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Captain_Photon View Post
For values of "shortly after" that include 1992, anyway...



I think of him as more akin to greats like Michael Caine and Christopher Lee, neither of whom have ever let the possibility that a movie might suck dissuade them from taking the job.
Christopher Lee is great for a character actor in a bit role. Liam Neeson was put on the front stage after Schindler's List and then did various degrees of declining nothing. Don't you DARE put Michael Caine in that same category (although now he does take a lot of jobs).


Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a *real* useful invention. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolog...t-sarcasm.html

 

Posted

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yomo_Kimyata View Post
Christopher Lee is great for a character actor in a bit role. Liam Neeson was put on the front stage after Schindler's List and then did various degrees of declining nothing. Don't you DARE put Michael Caine in that same category (although now he does take a lot of jobs).
Caine doesn't really do much currently unless it's Christopher Nolan on the other end of the phone, but there was a time that guy would do anything for a paycheck (see also: Jaws IV: The Revenge). He was always a solid actor, even in bad roles.

As far as Neeson goes, he's been hit or miss. I wouldn't call "Batman Begins" or "Taken" a varying degree of nothing.


Arc# 92382 -- "The S.P.I.D.E.R. and the Tyrant" -- Ninjas! Robots! Praetorians! It's totally epic! Play it now!

Arc # 316340 -- "Husk" -- Azuria loses something, a young woman harbors a dark secret, and the fate of the world is in your hands.