I saw the first of the Transformers and that was enough. I haven't even bothered with the new TMNT movies. I still feel like I can say that in my opinion they would all be bad.

I watched the first new Star Trek movie and it was solid. The next one was......fair, but was starting to lose too much classic Star Trek feel. At this point, I'm pretty certain I'm not going to bother with the third one in theaters. I'm pretty sure it will be bad. The trailers just aren't doing it for me.

It may not be fair to say that until after I see them, but I know my tastes and I know how to read into trailers and previews enough that I usually know the quality of what I'm going to see before I see it.

I'm going to give the new Ghostbusters a chance in someway, but I'm not particularly hopeful right now because of the vibe it is giving me. I really doubt I'll spend the money to see it in theaters. I'll probably wait until later. It has little to do with the cast either. In fact, if this was the case;

Quote Originally Posted by Shorty
If Andy Samberg, Jason Sudeikis, Will Forte and Jay Pharaoh were in this cast and said the exact same lines, word for word, and had the exact same shots, shot for shot, this film would be celebrated as smurf and the internet would be running to see it; there would be zero mention of "it just doesn't have that ORIGINAL GHOSTBUSTERS MAGIC [jerkoff motion]".
then I would be less interested in the movie personally. It's true that there are not a lot of all female comedy casts in movies and if they did it right, that extra piece could really make this movie unique, fresh, and different. Sadly, right now it just feels stale in the trailers.

Quote Originally Posted by Shorty
We can't expect the high-caliber level of Fury Road in all of the reboots or sequels that come up. We got lucky with that one. Anyone who was expecting this Ghostbusters to be better than the original fooled themselves into disappointment.
I find this statement depressing. Of course I can expect it to be the same high-caliber level. It should be the same high-caliber level, and if you're going to touch something like the Ghostbusters franchise then, IMO, in damn well better be a fantastic remake or you had no business touching it.

There's a reason they want to reboot these classic franchises. Because they were damn good, and people remember that. Giving producers and directors the wiggle room of "well, you can't expect all remakes to be as good as the original" is a major part of the problem, regardless of what set of genitals the actors have. I acknowledge that there are plenty of remakes that are crap, and that has lowered my expectations of how good other remakes will be, but that doesn't mean I just accept it. I shouldn't have to. It means that if I have good reason (my judgement from trailers and teasers) to believe the movie is a poor imitation of the original, then I'm specifically not going to see it in theaters, because I'm specifically not going to give them my money to encourage them into thinking crap remakes are an easy cash cow. If they want my business they can either do a good reboot/remake or they can try some original properties and ideas instead of beating a dead horse.

Quote Originally Posted by Shorty
It's getting shredded because people have the highest expectations for females participating in any art form and if we are less than stellar, we get nodded off as trout; whereas men can be a part of a mediocre performance and get recognized as being hilarious.

It's disappointing to see the negative reactions to this film in 2016. Go see it and contribute to the box office so we can have more of a chance of diverse films in the future.
I do agree there's a lot of heavy expectations put on minorities to perform above expectations just to get an equal amount of credit, and I also agree that it's bulltrout. It's not fair at all.

However, as I said above, I'm really doubtful that I'm going to see Ghostbusters in the theaters just to support diversity. Right now, I feel I'd also be supporting mediocrity. That's sad because I like supporting new, fresh ideas and seeing things get a cool twist.

It's the job of the trailer to convince me to spend my money, and it simply hasn't done that. I mentioned several other reboot franchises that have similarly been written off by me.

Sometimes you simply can't recapture the magic of the original and that's okay too. Take those funny ladies, take their talent, and let them create their own legacy with a new, fresh idea. If it looks good, if it looks clever, they'll get my ticket money on opening day, no questions asked.