I truly couldn’t believe it when the day had arrived. This film had been in what’s known as ‘developmental hell’ for 10 years, and had about the same number of script drafts. One of which featured a cult known as the Fred Heads who were going to throw his heart into Crystal Lake in order to revive him. Thankfully, we did not get that.
Finally, the day had arrived. I went to the first showing, and was so stoked that if I punched someone in the face it’d break their leg. And that doesn’t even make sense. That’s how jacked I was. Usually these tales end in heartbreak, but not this time. With the exception of Kane Hodder not playing Jason, FvJ completely delivered. It had a fantastic story, paid respect & homage to the origins & mythology of each character, and absolutely made good on the one thing people paid to see; Freddy vs Jason. One hell of a movie, and my second favorite movie going experience of all time.
However, my favorite comics were always The Avengers. I loved that team dynamic, and while the FF sometimes overcame them for my love (especially when Galactic showed up), The Avengers was on top more than any other in my mind. Plus, my favorite character of all time is Hawkeye.
So, while Iron Man was BRILLIANT and Incredible Hulk was a ton of fun, it was the fact that they freaking interconnected them in one universe that had me excited. Iron Man 2, Captain America and Thor just built the anticipation.
Then they signed Joss Whedon to direct it. I make no secret that I loved Buffy the Vampire Slayer, thought Firefly was freaking brilliant and consider Angel my favorite television program of all time.
So, take my favorite comic book team as a kid, add in the man who made me fall in love with television as a director and then tease me with five very fun movies leading into it, and by the time Avengers came out, I was flying high. I saw it twice within three days – something I NEVER do (because I’m always broke) and I LOVED EVERY FREAKING MINUTE OF IT.
I was most excited about it coming out – and it lived up to my expectations.
Rick Tym – Why was I so pumped for The Dark Knight? Because of the end of Batman Begins. Escalation. Bruce Wayne and Jim Gordon had begun to learn their limits, but the promise of a playing card meant that limit was about to be stretched to its absolute extreme. I still get chills thinking about the way Begins ended, with the promise of the greatest comic book villain of all time coming our way in the sequel.
And then it began. The murmurs, the rumbling. “How could they cast Health Ledger as the Joker?” “Hurrm…” The the film went viral. I actually got a Joker voicemail on my cell phone, from number 000-000-0000. It. Was. Chilling. And that coupled with the promise of seeing the Clown Prince of Crime realized on screen in Nolan’s Batverse are the reasons why I have never felt as much anticipation as I have for what I consider to be one of the greatest sequels — and standalone comic book films — of all time.
I remember ever hearing about this film. I was so excited and pumped that I went on to investigate Tom Hardy knowing he would play Bane. Thank goodness I did because I discovered Tom Hardy’s amazing acting talent (BRONSON, WARRIOR etc). And seeing all of the pics of Bane I knew I wanted to cosplay as the guy. So I started lifting more to gain mass to get Bane’s look as did Renegade Cinema writer and friend Aiden Myles Green. Him and I went to the IMAX Trilogy midnight showing dressed as Bane. We loved the films ending and the film itself whilst acknowledging it’s flaws, and it is a flawed film. But at least Nolan brought back Bane’s character after a certain director destroyed him in a certain Batman adaptation that I will not mention by name. But this film I could not have been more excited for.
Aiden Myles Green – THE DARK KNIGHT RISES. Never has my anticipation for a film been so massive, so passionately a part of my soul that it changed who I was and how I saw cinema. Like Brandon said, we acknowledged the film’s flaws and it’s big, sprawling, and sloppy – but there was nothing like the summer of 2012 when my life was measured in the amount of days until Christopher Nolan’s conclusion to his Batman trilogy was released. Here was a film so ballsy that audiences going into it were wholly prepared to watch Batman die on screen. The air was electric. The communal passion for a piece of art so massively anticipated was amazing. Few events can rise – RISE – above their surface level meaning, but July 20, 2012 was one of them.