Analyzing the Disappointing Aspects and Missed Opportunities in The Crow Reboot: A Critical Review

The crow was not bad, it was Disappointing and frankly I don’t know which is worse. I’m getting up to date with everything I couldn’t see for the last two weeks. I started with the crow and normally when I don’t like a movie, unless it is outrageously bad, why don’t I make a video? Well, for what? But I do want to make a video for this film. In the first place, because I did crave it. and secondly, because I recently made a video about the story there is behind the crow and in that video I was wondering something, the film will have to be seen to see if the actor lived up to the character or if indeed the character is cursed. I don’t know if the character is cursed, but I think the film does. There is a fundamental problem with this version of the crow. and I don’t think it has anything to do with interpretation. by Bill Scarsgard. It has more to do with it, I think, with the villain and it is for several reasons. On a first level is what this character has in the film. He is a villain whose motivation is to be a villain. He’s the most mysterious character I’ve ever seen in my fucking life, even forgetting other versions of the crow. Suppose this was an original film. This is the first time this story has been told, this character is a mother’s grandmother. From there, it is a little more difficult to get involved. emotionally. Second fight with the character for some reason, the villain was made supernatural. Also. In the history of the body, we know that Eric Raven returns from death and that they have seen him die, but then returns for revenge. It’s part of what makes it so scary. Why? Because it is not usual for someone to return from death, but when the villain has a pact with the devil to be immortal or what the fuck. That this character have any type of connection with anything supernatural takes a lot of weight off the character’s supernatural. by Eric Draven. Because the point is that his desire for revenge and his love for his fiancée are so strong. that fart brought him back from the dead, but whenever anyone wants can go through the process of becoming immortal, because it makes you feel less like a story of love and revenge and more like a superhero origin story, that we don’t need any more of those. And the third fart I see in the villain, and I think I am the greatest, the connection he has with the main characters far above. What we are asked to do is to as part of his deal with the devil, I don’t know what the fuck, this guy is looking for Shelly, who finds love and a sort of refuge in the character. Eric at some point. Those who respond to the villain find them, they unwind them and after that Eric returns from death to exact revenge. So far it sounds very similar to the ’94 movie, but there is one detail that makes it different. Here, at the beginning of the film, the villain is looking for specifically Shelly. Here, on the other hand, Eric and Shelly die as victims of a crime that had nothing to do with with the two of them. That the villain is looking for specifically Shelly Does it make more sense for Shelly to die in the film? It may be, but it takes away from the emotional burden when we consider where the crow story comes from. I told this also in my previous video, but James Howard, the creator of the raven character and the graphic novel and others, decided to write this story because his fiancée was run over and killed by a drunk driver. James Howard’s partner, the love of his life, died, not because I was him. A criminal was killed by a drunk driver. He was the victim of an accident in which she had absolutely no no responsibility. Losing a loved one is painful in any circumstance, but losing him because he had bad luck must be a very particular form of pain. And it is from that pain that the raven character wrote. and that is why in this film Shelly as, victim of an heinous crime that touched him by bad luck. They were not her, were not looking for it. To her in particular was a victim of something that could have happened to anyone. and that’s why Erick returns from the dead. He lost his girlfriend in a crime that other guys look like a prank. It hurts you bastard and that’s a bit of a fantasy in the film. What if you could take revenge or even throwing back a horrible thing that happened to you that was getting out of your control? And in this film, at the moment they establish a link, whatever, between Shelly and the villain, he screwed his mother. The subject because his death was no longer a coincidence, was already personal. And when the starting point of the story is that, the rest is a bit the same. Again, I don’t think the film is outrageously bad, but failed in the most important things. It is also very complicated not to compare it with that of ’94, which is a legendary film, but that is the risk one assumes when making a reboot or remake of a character that iconic. The public will compare it to the original, that is inevitable and when the comparison point is that powerful you can’t stumble like this