Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => SuperHero Adventures => Topic started by: Hat Guy on 23 August 2010, 12:32:36 AM
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Saw this film with the girlfriend last night and was impressed. Sad to say that if you're over 25 you may not get some of the references in it, but it is a damn fine film.
My girlfriend is also a miniature gamer and she demanded to know when I'd have a Scott Pilgrim for Super System. I need a geek in a t-shirt with a flaming samurai sword, any suggestions?
(Weirdest freaking post I've ever made ;D)
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I also think anybody under say 20 wont get all the references either, so darn they are working on a tight target audience. I'm afraid I cant help you with the guy himself tough.
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Err, over 25? Those are references to 8 bit systems, boyo, and I certainly recognized them, being an "Ancient" 32 year old.
-Doc
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Err, over 25? Those are references to 8 bit systems, boyo, and I certainly recognized them, being an "Ancient" 32 year old.
-Doc
Doc,
I'm 60 and I fear you may have peaked according to the mid-25 crowd I work with...
lol
Gracias,
Glenn
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Who is this Scott Pilgrimm?
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgOLmjhxVVU
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I don't mean to offend anyone (I've seen The Who in concert twice and most of my Dr Who collection was made before I was born, so I'm not the best generational content judge), but I'm the youngest in my Shadowrun group and was the only one to pick all of the Zelda, DDR, Aqua, Bust A Move and Street Fighter jokes. If you spent much of the 80s/90s with a joystick in your hands, go see the movie.
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I am very much a Johnny-Come-Lately here but I really recommend this one as a Christmas buy, if nothing else as a gift to yourself. Without having been much of a computer gamer I think I had just enough general knowledge of pop culture to get most references and I think a lot of them were just hilarious. The whole Not-Musical concept of the protagonists breaking out in highly stylized martial art fights instead of song was a riot, and that's the whole ex-partner thing aside. :)
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I thoroughly enjoyed this as well, although I have to say that it may lose something on the small screen (it has very splashy complex visuals that may lose a bit in translation). Well-worth seeing!
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Also loved the movie
So.. Anybody allready got an idea how to put Scott Pilgrim on the gaming table? A zombie hunter band with Scott Pilgrim, Ramona, Kim Pine, Knives and Stephen Stills would be awesome. What minis could I use to represent them?
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v40/Rantanplan/Moviezzz2/Ich%20Unterwegs/Moviezzz3/ramonas-hammer.jpg)
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(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v40/Rantanplan/Moviezzz2/Ich%20Unterwegs/Moviezzz3/ramonas-hammer.jpg)
I really dug when Ramona hauld that thing out of her handbag. lol
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So much for a Christmas buy, the dumb idiots in charge to release dates are holding out til the 27th of Dec...MORONS!! I want Scott Pilgrim and Its a Trap now!!
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Hmmm... It's out in the US now if you have a region-free DVD player. ;)
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It came out in Australia today (15/12/2010), I have a copy right here.
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Hmmm... It's out in the US now if you have a region-free DVD player. ;)
Yeah but this close to Christmas it would turn up some time after New Year.
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Yeah but this close to Christmas it would turn up some time after New Year.
Check if there are region 1 dvd providers where you live. That's how I got mine.
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Replace the hair and here you have it!
(http://www.reapermini.com/graphics/gallery/4/50055_w_1.jpg)
Yes? No? I'm yet to see the movie, but I am going to hire it soon I think.
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Great film. I love the endless pop-culture references, even if I didn't get all of them. It reminded me of the 'Spaced' sitcom writ-large. No surprise there given that it was Edgar Wrights first big outing.
You'll also need some skateboarders. I'd warrant that anything with a Japanese cyberpunky feel might work, as the whole design-ethic has a lot of manga influence as well as the computer games world. With a not-too-serious cartoony knockabout games system it could be a lot of fun. As well as Ramona's exes, and battles of the bands, you also have options for lots of random encounters - Knives should surely be a wildcard interrupting at unfortunate moments?
Incidentally, I absolutely recommend the original comics if you can get them (Oni Press in the States, 4th Estate in the UK). There are six volumes - all roughly condensed in the film - so lots to get hold off, and more on the peripheral characters. Awesome!
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Incidentally, I absolutely recommend the original comics if you can get them (Oni Press in the States, 4th Estate in the UK). There are six volumes - all roughly condensed in the film - so lots to get hold off, and more on the peripheral characters. Awesome!
Hear hear! They are fantastic. My wife and I spent a very enjoyable day in Toronto on a Scott Pilgrim Pilgrimage a month or two ago, and visited quite a few of the movie and graphic novel locations - Castleloma, Honest Eds, The Pizza Pizza in front of Honest Eds (sitting in the same booth as the characters in the movie), Sonic Boom, Lee's Palace etc etc. A great day, highly recommended if going to Toronto.
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the films 20mins too long.
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Hear hear! They are fantastic. My wife and I spent a very enjoyable day in Toronto on a Scott Pilgrim Pilgrimage a month or two ago, and visited quite a few of the movie and graphic novel locations - Castleloma, Honest Eds, The Pizza Pizza in front of Honest Eds (sitting in the same booth as the characters in the movie), Sonic Boom, Lee's Palace etc etc. A great day, highly recommended if going to Toronto.
And Sneaky Dee's too! I visited friends in Toronto a few years ago and they took me there - a great dive bar, and hilarious to find it in the comics!
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Got it on DVD, and loved it, I dont agree that its 20 minutes to long, I didnt want it to end. Now I want a mini of Ramona with her hammer!
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I agree a min of Ramona and her hammer would rock! :D
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(http://wyrd-games.net/shop/images/P/Taelor%20Final.jpg)
Maybe as a base? Needs some green stuff to clothe her properly.
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Liked the comic, cant bring myself to watch the film.
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With the film, imagine Edgar Wright was given the first five volumes, and jumbled stuff around a little bit to mke it fit his vision more. Then for the ending, imagine O'malley gave Wright an outline (where it happens, what sort of things happen) and let him run with it (which may well be what happened as the final volume didn't comeout until a month or so before the film did...).
All else failing, it's worth seeing just to see (and hear) the Universal intro 8bit style...
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Liked the comic, cant bring myself to watch the film.
I loved the books as well, and I was eminently pleased with the film.
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(http://wyrd-games.net/shop/images/P/Taelor%20Final.jpg)
Maybe as a base? Needs some green stuff to clothe her properly.
Hammer is to little.
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Weirdly enough as a born and raised Torontonian who actually has some personal knowledge of the guy who wrote these comics... this movie is much more about the life of a Gen X kid growing up in downtown TO than anything else. The pop-cultural references are only really recognizable to the twenty and under crowd since they were co-opted into the new 'Geek Chic' of society. I always giggle when I see eight-bit t-shirts on teenagers who've never known a two-button controller, or tried to beat a black-cartridge Tengen port on their NES only to learn its impossible because the game was designed to eat quarters.
There was a huge fight during the production of this film during which the writer of the series very nearly walked with the property. The producers wanted to move the setting to New York and update all the references to make it more 'tween' friendly in the current climate. Production halted. The writer stood his ground. The producers countered that they would just film it in New York but set it still in Toronto as the scenery would be more 'hip'. Again the writer flatly refused. It is effectively his story of being in Toronto during that period.
Several of the clubs in the film were actually rebuilt because they no longer exist. The Rock-It for example (which was, btw....a toilet) is now a Spring Rolls (chain Thai food) on Church Street. Lee's Palace also had to be rebuilt as a set as it has been closed for years.
Several scenes take place on a TTC Bus. Casa Loma is a famous landmark where the Skaterfight took place. Those handrails are a REAL location on its grounds. Honest Ed's at Bathurst and Spadina is the setting for several scenes as is famous Toronto Record shop Sonic Boom. I worked at a Second Cup (where Scotts sister is employed) all through University and have drunkenly consumed thousands of slices of Pizza Pizza. If you're near my age and from Tronto, that movie could simply just be about your life if you take out the superpowers. ;)
Of course this wouldn't be recognizable to non-Torontonians. The period references would be... but I'll tell you that I saw this flick in a run-down Rainbow Theatre at Market Square in downtown TO and the crowd was so moved there was literally applause, shouts and mayhem though out the entire picture.
Wonderful movie. If anyone here who is in their mid to late thirties and from Toronto hasn't seen it; don't walk - RUN. :)
A
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I thought it was just a good movie all around. :D
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My best film of 2010 has to be a toss-up between Scott Pilgrim and Up In the Air, there's not a minute of SP I don't thoroughly enjoy.
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Hammer is to little.
It's not about the size of the hammer, it's how you use it ;D
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I saw the film last week. I liked the visual effects, great!
Not sure about Micheal Cera though. Dont get me wrong, I really liked him in Juno...but hes not Scott Pilgrim. Still, enjoyed the film even though I thought I would not! Yays!