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Made in us
Most Glorious Grey Seer





Everett, WA

So.... why does a giant robot punching these critters in the face work while a cruse missile doesn't? Don't give me that stuff about hard skin cause we have bunker busters that'll go right through that.


 
   
Made in us
Winged Kroot Vulture






 Breotan wrote:
So.... why does a giant robot punching these critters in the face work while a cruse missile doesn't? Don't give me that stuff about hard skin cause we have bunker busters that'll go right through that.



Whose to say it will? I'm not a xenobioligist, are you? It might scratch them, it might hurt them, but given their size I don't think a cruise missile will be all the power they need to stop them.

The giant robots were made to pull them away from civilization and be dealt with in more remote areas.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/12 23:26:07


I'm back! 
   
Made in us
Dakka Veteran






Cruise missles do work agianst them. it just takes ~3 days worth of munitions to bring one down.

 NELS1031 wrote:
This movie will never live up to the majesty that was its spiritual father, Robot Jox. I mean, robots with chain saw peens ffs.


Na I think this movie's spiritual father, is Evangelion... its pretty close to the same story.


This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/12 23:53:34


"I LIEK CHOCOLATE MILK" - Batman
"It exist because it needs to. Because its not the tank the imperium deserve but the one it needs right now . So it wont complain because it can take it. Because they're not our normal tank. It is a silent guardian, a watchful protector . A leman russ!" - Ilove40k
3k
2k
/ 1k
1k 
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

Got invited to go see this with friends from work and I did.

I will say. I'm pleased. The beginning of the film was about as corny as I was expecting and as silly but once the movie got to the robots fighting monsters part I could sit back and enjoy myself. The acting is blarg, the dialogue cheesy, and the plot inveriably stupid;

Spoiler:
Whoa whoa whoa world leaders. Let me get this straight. You're stopping your giant robot program, to build a massive ocean spanning wall? I must say. For all my complaints about giant robots being impractical in all aspects you managed to find the only other solution to your problem that is even more absurd!

Also, how the feth is a nuclear reactor not digital?


Also the first movie that I've ever been glad to see in 3D. Some of the camera tricks like water splashing against my 'eyes' were much better than previous attempts I've seen that really just felt gimmicky. The film is all spectacle and no substance but its spectacle that's worth going to see.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/13 00:26:48


   
Made in ca
Regular Dakkanaut





Oh this is one of the few cases that I am really optimistic about a movie, I want some big stompey robots fighting big stompey monsters. Mechwarrior Online has been giving me my fix for the former but not so much the latter.
   
Made in us
Posts with Authority






Yeah, normally I hate 3d, but it worked really well in this. It wasn't a bunch of gimmicky popout crap.

As for the viability of using the robots, of course it is illogical, that isn't what the movie, hell the entire genre is about. If you go in with a curmudgeonly attitude expecting realism from something like this, you've rather missed the point.
   
Made in au
Anti-Armour Swiss Guard






Newcastle, OZ

I saw the trailer.
That alone removed any interest I had in seeing it.

I gave up on kaiju when I was 9 or 10, when I discovered SF with spaceships and explosions. Sure, Gamera was cool when I was 8 - but compared to space dogfights and shiny chrome robots it just no longer rated.

I've liked ALL of GDT's previous stuff - but this is just one movie I have absolutely no desire to see.

The same holds for man of steel, Iron man3, or any other superhero flick.

I'm OVER 50 (and so far over everyone's BS, too).
Old enough to know better, young enough to not give a ****.

That is not dead which can eternal lie ...

... and yet, with strange aeons, even death may die.
 
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

 Bromsy wrote:
Yeah, normally I hate 3d, but it worked really well in this. It wasn't a bunch of gimmicky popout crap.

As for the viability of using the robots, of course it is illogical, that isn't what the movie, hell the entire genre is about. If you go in with a curmudgeonly attitude expecting realism from something like this, you've rather missed the point.


As I stated when the film was first announced, I love giant robots. I'm a huge Gundam fan. Mobile Suit Gundam may well be my favorite anime of all time! But as awesome as giant robots are, I can't get over the whole "tanks and jets aren't working sir. I propose we build a giant robot and have it beat the monsters with its fists" illogical brilliance. They even have the robots armed with firearms but bizarrely they still engage in primarily in hand to hand combat even when not underwater. This film doesn't even boast the rehumanization of mechanized warfare angle present in Gundam and other works like it for thematic justification.

If you can look past that, awesome. You'll definitely enjoy the movie more for it. I have a harder time with it XD

This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 2013/07/13 03:27:31


   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

I just got back from the movie and thoroughly friggin' loved it. The paired pilot angle makes perfectly fine sense when they actually explain it, but they also cunningly don't make the folly other scifi movies make and go too far into trying to explain how the fake science somehow "works".

It took all of the awesome robot fighting from Transformers, but completely eliminated the idiotic half-naked chicks thrown in for pre-pubescent boys to lust after. The female lead was the perfect non-sexpot. She was definitely cute and tough and I'd go after her, but she wasn't a random Victoria's Secret model.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/13 04:07:53




"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in gb
Fixture of Dakka





Southampton

 AegisGrimm wrote:
The female lead was the perfect non-sexpot. She was definitely cute and tough and I'd go after her, but she wasn't a random Victoria's Secret model.


Yes, she gives the film a bit of soul. Idris Elba doesn't disappoint either.

   
Made in us
Shadowy Grot Kommittee Memba




The Great State of New Jersey

I absolutely loved it as did the crowd of 15 or so friends I saw it with. I thought it was a brilliant homage to the kaiju films of the 50s through 80s and was pretty much everything I expected and hoped for.

CoALabaer wrote:
Wargamers hate two things: the state of the game and change.
 
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

I was actually baffled when I went to see it. I showed up 20 minutes early expecting a huge crowd and I didn't want a crappy seat. The theater was empty by show time and I must say I was quite confused. Only four or five others in there with me. Same theater same time Man of Steel was packed to the brim and I imagine PR would attract the same crowd.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/13 06:56:16


   
Made in gb
Fixture of Dakka





Southampton

 LordofHats wrote:
I was actually baffled when I went to see it. I showed up 20 minutes early expecting a huge crowd and I didn't want a crappy seat. The theater was empty by show time and I must say I was quite confused. Only four or five others in there with me. Same theater same time Man of Steel was packed to the brim and I imagine PR would attract the same crowd.


Yes, my showing had hardly anyone in it either. Probably needs a bit of word of mouth.

   
Made in us
Focused Fire Warrior





Florida

GO SEE THIS FILM! Seriously. Go see it in 3D, I might add...IMAX if they have it in your area (sadly, the closest IMAX to me is over an hour away, but I may go see it again just to see it in IMAX). Sure, the story isn't deep, but the action is awesome, and NO SHAKY CAM NONSENSE!

Breotan wrote:So.... why does a giant robot punching these critters in the face work while a cruse missile doesn't? Don't give me that stuff about hard skin cause we have bunker busters that'll go right through that.


Somewhat of a spoiler, but it doesn't ruin the movie:
Spoiler:
The main character narrates during the beginning description of what happened when the first Kaiju arrived. They used conventional weapons to kill it, but it took far too long for them to bring the monster down, and it destroyed three cities in the process. Cruise missiles and other weapons do indeed hurt them, but they're so big that it's like a death by a thousand cuts; slow and agonizing.


LordofHats wrote:
Spoiler:
Whoa whoa whoa world leaders. Let me get this straight. You're stopping your giant robot program, to build a massive ocean spanning wall? I must say. For all my complaints about giant robots being impractical in all aspects you managed to find the only other solution to your problem that is even more absurd!

Also, how the feth is a nuclear reactor not digital?


Spoiler:
Spoiler:
A nuclear reactor does not have to be digital. Obviously, that isn't really the case nowadays, but how do you think they operated nuclear reactors before digital computers existed? The nuclear reactor pre-dates the digital computer (back when the first reactor was created, computers filled up entire rooms). You'd be surprised at how many military electronics nowadays still utilize electron tubes and analog components, specifically because of the risk of an EMP event like the one Kaiju used in the film.

- 4300pts.
- 2500pts.
- 4500pts.
- 2000

DQ:80-S++G+M++B++I+Pw40k11+D++A+++/areWD-R+T(S)DM+ 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

Unlike some movies that use it as a gimmick, Pacific Rim is by far the best experience in 3D. The water and rain effects are very impressive, especially.



"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

 spectreoneone wrote:

Spoiler:
The main character narrates during the beginning description of what happened when the first Kaiju arrived. They used conventional weapons to kill it, but it took far too long for them to bring the monster down, and it destroyed three cities in the process. Cruise missiles and other weapons do indeed hurt them, but they're so big that it's like a death by a thousand cuts; slow and agonizing.


We need bigger guns for our bigger robots.


Spoiler:
A nuclear reactor does not have to be digital. Obviously, that isn't really the case nowadays, but how do you think they operated nuclear reactors before digital computers existed? The nuclear reactor pre-dates the digital computer (back when the first reactor was created, computers filled up entire rooms). You'd be surprised at how many military electronics nowadays still utilize electron tubes and analog components, specifically because of the risk of an EMP event like the one Kaiju used in the film.


Spoiler:
But it's just so plot convenient. The Jeagers weren't built in 1960's and given that even the diesel powered robot is apparently digital, it just seems so corny that the mk3 is immune to what shut down all the other older and newer models. It's a great chekov's gun for the ending, but the way they used it in the middle of the movie is just blah to me.

EDIT: They also use the term nuclear as though it is unique to Gipsy Danger, so what exactly is powering the other machines other than the one specifically said to have 50 diesel engines? I just found their usage of the design differences between the machines confusing because logically the development of jaegers seems to make little sense even using internal logic.

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2013/07/13 17:50:47


   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka




 Bromsy wrote:
It is amazing. If you don't go see it, be very ashamed. Cause you are a jerk.

I personally liked it because unlike say Man of Steel, when giant robots were crashing around cities and fighting giant monsters, I wasn't all "Why aren't they saving the people?" Because even though they tried, it was made very clear that this was the best humanity could do. And somehow they kept the action more grounded than I would have thought, considering y'know, giant robots fighting giant monsters.


....Awesome!


Is this going to get me to want to buy Monstropolis?
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut





Spitsbergen

I refuse to pay 15 bucks to watch giant robots punch giant sea monsters. I've fallen for that before, and I won't be had again. This is absolutely a wait-for-redbox-and-watch-plastered movie.
   
Made in gb
Fixture of Dakka





Southampton

 rubiksnoob wrote:
I refuse to pay 15 bucks to watch giant robots punch giant sea monsters. I've fallen for that before, and I won't be had again. This is absolutely a wait-for-redbox-and-watch-plastered movie.


Then you miss out because this is the best giant robots punching giant sea monsters movie you're likely to see in a while

Nobody is claiming this is high art, but the punching of giant sea monsters is very well executed and really has to be seen on the big screen to be enjoyed.

   
Made in us
[DCM]
.







 Flashman wrote:
 rubiksnoob wrote:
I refuse to pay 15 bucks to watch giant robots punch giant sea monsters. I've fallen for that before, and I won't be had again. This is absolutely a wait-for-redbox-and-watch-plastered movie.


Then you miss out because this is the best giant robots punching giant sea monsters movie you're likely to see in a while

Nobody is claiming this is high art, but the punching of giant sea monsters is very well executed and really has to be seen on the big screen to be enjoyed.


Pretty much!

Saw it today with my oldest daughter and we loved it!

Made me think of all those Saturdays I spent watching Channel 56's Creature Double Feature.

I was always there for the giant monsters (I didn't know they were called Kaiju back then in...the late 70's and early 80's!) and the giant robots - wasn't really all that into Dracula and the Wolfman!

This movie is a lot of fun and well worth seeing in the theater.

That is, of course, if you're at all into these things!
   
Made in gb
Major





Just got back from seeing this and it was fun for the 1st 90 minutes or so but I was checking my watch towards the end.

There was also a hell of a plot hole right at the end.

Spoiler:
According to the scientists the rift will only let something with Kaiju DNA can pass through it. Hence the need for Gipsy to grab the Kaiju corpse to pass through the rift to get to the Kaiju universe and detonate it's reactor. So a one way trip for the crew in other words.

But no, they eject their escape pods and make it back to Earth, with absolutely no explanation given whatsoever.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/13 23:32:52


"And if we've learnt anything over the past 1000 mile retreat it's that Russian agriculture is in dire need of mechanisation!" 
   
Made in us
Fireknife Shas'el




I watched it and I enjoyed it. Kind of wished there was more of it. The thing is now it's got me on a giant monster kick. I wonder if I can get mechs into my D&D game without people griping too much.
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

Someone really needs to make a good set of rules for a miniatures game that will allow us to use 6" action figures amongst 15mm terrain. Kind of like a 15mm Monsterpocolypse.

I remember all the fun I used to have fighting my robot figures against Godzilla monster figures, while 15mm plastic army-men futilely died as collateral damage. Make that a miniatures game, and I can form an argument as to why I can do that as an adult (I don't have a kid yet).

I wonder how it would work to just use the stats for Warjacks and Warbeasts from Privateer Press, but proxy in my own figures? They already have rules for good melee, throwing, and the like.



This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2013/07/14 01:32:40




"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




 LuciusAR wrote:
Just got back from seeing this and it was fun for the 1st 90 minutes or so but I was checking my watch towards the end.

There was also a hell of a plot hole right at the end.

Spoiler:
According to the scientists the rift will only let something with Kaiju DNA can pass through it. Hence the need for Gipsy to grab the Kaiju corpse to pass through the rift to get to the Kaiju universe and detonate it's reactor. So a one way trip for the crew in other words.

But no, they eject their escape pods and make it back to Earth, with absolutely no explanation given whatsoever.


Not neccessarily...

Spoiler:
its possible that only the earth end of the tunnel had the fail safe. After all, if earthlings couldn't come through from their side, and they had a factory full of kaiju on their side...why worry about needing a fail safe going both ways?


As an aside saw this two times already, once in IMAX 3D. Worth the price of admission both times
   
Made in us
Dwarf High King with New Book of Grudges




United States

nobody wrote:

As an aside saw this two times already, once in IMAX 3D. Worth the price of admission both times


I saw it in IMAX as well, and it was definitely worth the additional cost. As with most films built around scale and spectacle, Pacific Rim benefited greatly from the format.

I really liked the film as I got exactly what I expected: massive amounts of spectacle, Charlie Day being manic, and Ron Perlman being Ron Perlman. The obvious technical problems within the universe didn't bother me, as the implied subtitle of the film has always been "rule of cool".

 Frazzled wrote:
OK this isn't really a spoiler but why don't the humans just nuke the monsters?


I know they do it in the comic, and the reason given for end of the practice was a combination of radiation, and the difficulty of luring kaiju out to sea. I don't remember if they addressed that in the movie, though.

 LordofHats wrote:

Spoiler:
But it's just so plot convenient. The Jeagers weren't built in 1960's and given that even the diesel powered robot is apparently digital, it just seems so corny that the mk3 is immune to what shut down all the other older and newer models. It's a great chekov's gun for the ending, but the way they used it in the middle of the movie is just blah to me.


Spoiler:
But that's true of the entire movie. I mean, as bio-weapons go, the kaiju are really gak. If you can genetically engineer a massive monster, you can probably design a pathogen to kill everything on the planet you're trying to conquer while also rendering yourself immune to it.

This message was edited 5 times. Last update was at 2013/07/14 02:20:28


Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh. 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka





West Michigan, deep in Whitebread, USA

Nuking monsters that are actively seeking out population centers is generally a bad idea. The Jaeger's job is to enforce the "miracle mile" off-shore.

The only glaring hole I saw in a great action flick is that even lacking ranged weapons on the Jaegers, why they all have to full-on grapple with the Kaiju, rather than using melee weapons like swords, flails, and motorized saws (other than one tragically limited occurrence of the latter)? Other than the rule of cool, of course. It would be generally accepted as "boring" if the opening move of a fight was to light up the Kaiju from a half-mile out with mega-shells and then return to base.

I completely understand the visceral thrill of a 25-story MMA fight, but without any spoilers, when the pilots suddenly "remember" to pull out the on-board melee weapons, it definitely amps the fights up to "11".

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2013/07/14 02:24:32




"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."  
   
Made in us
Proud Triarch Praetorian





 Breotan wrote:
So.... why does a giant robot punching these critters in the face work while a cruse missile doesn't? Don't give me that stuff about hard skin cause we have bunker busters that'll go right through that.



Who cares?

Giant Robots vs Kaiju. You really want to go in to the science of that?
   
Made in us
Infiltrating Hawwa'





Through the looking glass

Just got back from the theater.

Holy. Freaking. Crap.

I don't think I've ever had more fun watching a movie in, well, forever.

If you walked away from a a movie about giant crazy mechs fighting giant crazy monsters, and the only thing you can think about is how it's not realistic, then about the only thing I can says is that you hate fun, and I pity you.

“Sometimes I can hear my bones straining under the weight of all the lives I'm not living.”

― Jonathan Safran Foer 
   
Made in us
Secret Force Behind the Rise of the Tau




USA

 dogma wrote:

Spoiler:
But that's true of the entire movie. I mean, as bio-weapons go, the kaiju are really gak. If you can genetically engineer a massive monster, you can probably design a pathogen to kill everything on the planet you're trying to conquer while also rendering yourself immune to it.


I find that simpler to work my mine around. In my mind, I know how a human thinks. So when a human character does something that strikes me as absurd, it irks me.

Spoiler:
The aliens however are completely alien, in every sense. We really don't know much about them or how they think. They aren't humanized in the film in the slightest, so in my mind I can work around them behaving in a manner counter to human thought. It really just makes them more alien.

Though when I first saw the trailer I'll say I was expecting the Kaiju to be Lovecraftian in nature.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/07/14 03:31:06


   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut




 Breotan wrote:
So.... why does a giant robot punching these critters in the face work while a cruse missile doesn't? Don't give me that stuff about hard skin cause we have bunker busters that'll go right through that.



Going to answer in spoilers since some of it comes from the movie and some from the prequel graphic novel....

Spoiler:
The first Kaiju that hit San Francisco took 6 days to kill. They threw the kitchen sink at it (a few of the scenes in the graphic novel include a run by an AC130 gunship) before resorting to using a nuke. They killed the next three the same way. The problem was that until you got to bigger, city-threatening weapons, they were relying on weapons designed to kill other humans and their war machines.

Eventually they realized that they needed a way to kill the Kaiju without resorting to finishing the job for them by destroying said city.
   
 
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