I don't think he's complaining about editing here. The boxes are stacked because they were unloaded from a ship. So why wouldn't they have the robot already out to move those into the pile? Of course the ship they unloaded from could have used separate unboxed robots that left with the ship.
And in the movie the robots are combot robots that stopped fighting after the emperor and his family were killed. So the robots are basically useless, so the ship just left it behind because they didn't want the junk on-board. So there is a story reason why the robot is crated.
I don't think it's that big of deal. I hate jump cuts in fight scenes, if you can't properly choreograph a fight don't film it.
He wrote a scene, where someone picks up a box, and hands it to a robot.
This movie, costed 166 Million. He may be the producer, but ultimately, Netflix footed the bill and paid him for this. If you have a Netflix account, this came out of your wallet, and it's below Bollywood quality.
I think you might be missing some context here. The robots are combat robots that refuse to do combat since the emperor was killed. The guy picks up the box and shoves it into the robot's arms aggressively. The soldiers are not happy to have the robots with them.
And you store that old robot in a new box, that you carry around? Yes. I am missing context here that would make any of that make sense. It has legs, have it walk to where you wish for it to perform it's job.
It's crated because it's a combat robot that refuses to fight. So the ship it was on boxed him up. They saw an opportunity to offload the deadweight and left it with the garrison left behind.
With all the things wrong with that movie why is this the nit you pick?
I didn't mention the editing. At all. It's a robot. Why is it in a box? Why are there three people there. Why does it get out of a box, among boxes? Who placed those boxes there? Why does steam come out of the box? Who, why is someone allowing him to make these movies? And more importantly; How did his adopted daughter die? Who allowed him to adopted a Chinese national?
They're writing the names of the movies before writing the scripts. Can work for a title of an episode of Rick and Morty, but not a movie named Rebel Moon, where you write those rebels as simple farmers using horse drawn plows.
How did they move such a massive crate containing a heavy duty robot to it's location to the center of the clearing alongside the other boxes?
why did they not offload those boxes to their actual destination? They flew them there after all.
how did they move those boxes, when they only have fighting robots and not moving robots?
Were there moving robots not shown?
The box the robot is packed in is filled with cool air for some reason that rushes out.
They pick up a box for a robot to hand it to it, thus doing more work than the bot will do carrying the box
They are flying around with excess weight they need to off load
There aren't even enough boxes to warrant unpacking the bot
This excess weight includes one single fighting robot, out of an entire army that refuses to fight.
They carried the box containing the robot to that location, as apposed to simply having it walk to that location
There is no reason to have a garrison, or any of that gear at that location
Again, why is the bot in a box?
The few boxes that need to be moved were moved to that location, only to be moved to another
Zack constructed this scene to give the audience information, while simply not understanding the logistics of moving boxes efficiently, utilizing the robot in the scene.
It would be easier to list the number of scenes that make sense in this movie, as that list would be zero.
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/rebel_moon_part_1_a_child_of_fire
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ATnBuOMOZY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-s4jYm9Mz4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDTOD94YRpY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzm3xidFySc
I don't think he's complaining about editing here. The boxes are stacked because they were unloaded from a ship. So why wouldn't they have the robot already out to move those into the pile? Of course the ship they unloaded from could have used separate unboxed robots that left with the ship.
And in the movie the robots are combot robots that stopped fighting after the emperor and his family were killed. So the robots are basically useless, so the ship just left it behind because they didn't want the junk on-board. So there is a story reason why the robot is crated.
I don't think it's that big of deal. I hate jump cuts in fight scenes, if you can't properly choreograph a fight don't film it.
He wrote a scene, where someone picks up a box, and hands it to a robot.
This movie, costed 166 Million. He may be the producer, but ultimately, Netflix footed the bill and paid him for this. If you have a Netflix account, this came out of your wallet, and it's below Bollywood quality.
I think you might be missing some context here. The robots are combat robots that refuse to do combat since the emperor was killed. The guy picks up the box and shoves it into the robot's arms aggressively. The soldiers are not happy to have the robots with them.
And you store that old robot in a new box, that you carry around? Yes. I am missing context here that would make any of that make sense. It has legs, have it walk to where you wish for it to perform it's job.
It's crated because it's a combat robot that refuses to fight. So the ship it was on boxed him up. They saw an opportunity to offload the deadweight and left it with the garrison left behind.
With all the things wrong with that movie why is this the nit you pick?
I didn't mention the editing. At all. It's a robot. Why is it in a box? Why are there three people there. Why does it get out of a box, among boxes? Who placed those boxes there? Why does steam come out of the box? Who, why is someone allowing him to make these movies? And more importantly; How did his adopted daughter die? Who allowed him to adopted a Chinese national?
They're writing the names of the movies before writing the scripts. Can work for a title of an episode of Rick and Morty, but not a movie named Rebel Moon, where you write those rebels as simple farmers using horse drawn plows.
Everything in the scene is wrong.
They keep the robot in a box.
The robot's crate is new
The robot is old and warn
How did they move such a massive crate containing a heavy duty robot to it's location to the center of the clearing alongside the other boxes?
why did they not offload those boxes to their actual destination? They flew them there after all.
how did they move those boxes, when they only have fighting robots and not moving robots?
Were there moving robots not shown?
The box the robot is packed in is filled with cool air for some reason that rushes out.
They pick up a box for a robot to hand it to it, thus doing more work than the bot will do carrying the box
They are flying around with excess weight they need to off load
There aren't even enough boxes to warrant unpacking the bot
This excess weight includes one single fighting robot, out of an entire army that refuses to fight.
They carried the box containing the robot to that location, as apposed to simply having it walk to that location
There is no reason to have a garrison, or any of that gear at that location
Again, why is the bot in a box?
The few boxes that need to be moved were moved to that location, only to be moved to another
Zack constructed this scene to give the audience information, while simply not understanding the logistics of moving boxes efficiently, utilizing the robot in the scene.
It would be easier to list the number of scenes that make sense in this movie, as that list would be zero.
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/rebel_moon_part_1_a_child_of_fire
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzczijDtnFY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ATnBuOMOZY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-s4jYm9Mz4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDTOD94YRpY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzm3xidFySc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slCZYdN_ZNM