Alan_H4
Joined Mar 2011
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Alan_H4's rating
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Alan_H4's rating
Just watched Episode 7 of One Punch Man Season 3, and I'm honestly convinced the studio didn't just drop the ball; they kicked it into orbit and clocked out early. After six episodes of zero life, zero impact, and zero respect for the source material, I kept the tiniest thread of hope that Episode 7 would finally deliver something. Maybe a real Saitama moment. Maybe even a flicker of effort.
What I got instead felt like a parody of bad animation.
I lasted one minute. One single minute. I saw the so-called S-Class heroes swinging at that monster with the energy of a half-finished slideshow, and I skipped straight through the episode until the final 30 seconds. And even those 30 seconds felt like watching boredom crystallize in real time. The whole episode has the excitement level of a dying battery.
It honestly hurts to see what they've done to this series. One Punch Man had the potential to sit right next to Demon Slayer in popularity. If they'd released a big cinematic arc like a proper Monster Association finale or a Saitama vs Garou movie, I would've been first in line with my wallet open. Fans around the world would've shown up. The box office would have exploded without question.
Instead we waited years for this disaster. This isn't just a bad season. It's one of the biggest anime collapses I've ever seen. Fans everywhere are saying the same thing online: Reddit threads are grieving, Twitter is furious, YouTube is roasting it, and everyone on TikTok is basically asking how this even got approved.
The action is a joke. Still frames pretending to be fights. When something finally moves, it looks like a cheap filler scene from an old bargain-bin DVD. No weight, no impact, no emotion. It's like watching One Punch Man performed by cutouts on popsicle sticks.
This season does not exist to me. It's not canon. It's not even funny-bad. It is a complete failure. Give this to literally any other competent studio and they would resurrect the series instantly. But what we got instead feels disrespectful to fans, to the original manga, and to anime as a whole.
Episode 7, like the rest of this season, is pure trash. A total waste of time. Easily the worst anime season I've ever watched in my life. I wish I could wipe it from my memory.
What I got instead felt like a parody of bad animation.
I lasted one minute. One single minute. I saw the so-called S-Class heroes swinging at that monster with the energy of a half-finished slideshow, and I skipped straight through the episode until the final 30 seconds. And even those 30 seconds felt like watching boredom crystallize in real time. The whole episode has the excitement level of a dying battery.
It honestly hurts to see what they've done to this series. One Punch Man had the potential to sit right next to Demon Slayer in popularity. If they'd released a big cinematic arc like a proper Monster Association finale or a Saitama vs Garou movie, I would've been first in line with my wallet open. Fans around the world would've shown up. The box office would have exploded without question.
Instead we waited years for this disaster. This isn't just a bad season. It's one of the biggest anime collapses I've ever seen. Fans everywhere are saying the same thing online: Reddit threads are grieving, Twitter is furious, YouTube is roasting it, and everyone on TikTok is basically asking how this even got approved.
The action is a joke. Still frames pretending to be fights. When something finally moves, it looks like a cheap filler scene from an old bargain-bin DVD. No weight, no impact, no emotion. It's like watching One Punch Man performed by cutouts on popsicle sticks.
This season does not exist to me. It's not canon. It's not even funny-bad. It is a complete failure. Give this to literally any other competent studio and they would resurrect the series instantly. But what we got instead feels disrespectful to fans, to the original manga, and to anime as a whole.
Episode 7, like the rest of this season, is pure trash. A total waste of time. Easily the worst anime season I've ever watched in my life. I wish I could wipe it from my memory.
From the moment I heard people calling Chief of War "the next Game of Thrones," I knew I had to watch it. As someone who lived and breathed GoT for years, I've been craving something with that same epic energy, big worlds, deep rivalries, and the feeling that anything could happen. Add Jason Momoa into the mix, and my expectations went through the roof. He's got that same commanding presence he had as Khal Drogo, but here it feels even more personal and grounded.
Three episodes in, I'm hooked. This show doesn't just look good, it feels alive. The acting is intense across the board, but Momoa takes the lead with a mix of raw power and quiet authority that makes you want to follow him into battle. The landscapes are jaw-dropping, like the sweeping shots of Winterfell or Dragonstone, but with a fresh, tropical wildness you don't see in other epics. You can almost smell the ocean air and feel the heat radiating off the sand.
What really gets me hyped is the way the world is set up. Different tribes with their own identities and histories. Political maneuvering. The sense that every alliance is temporary and every character has their own agenda. It's got the bones of what made Game of Thrones addictive, that mix of beauty, danger, and unpredictability.
Right now, it's an easy 8/10 for me. It's got the scale, the style, and the setup. To climb to a 9 or 9.5, I'm hoping for deeper character work, more layered dialogue, and those "holy crap" moments that leave you desperate for the next episode. If they can hit those marks, this could become the show we've all been waiting for since the GoT finale.
8/10 - might get to 9.5/10.
Three episodes in, I'm hooked. This show doesn't just look good, it feels alive. The acting is intense across the board, but Momoa takes the lead with a mix of raw power and quiet authority that makes you want to follow him into battle. The landscapes are jaw-dropping, like the sweeping shots of Winterfell or Dragonstone, but with a fresh, tropical wildness you don't see in other epics. You can almost smell the ocean air and feel the heat radiating off the sand.
What really gets me hyped is the way the world is set up. Different tribes with their own identities and histories. Political maneuvering. The sense that every alliance is temporary and every character has their own agenda. It's got the bones of what made Game of Thrones addictive, that mix of beauty, danger, and unpredictability.
Right now, it's an easy 8/10 for me. It's got the scale, the style, and the setup. To climb to a 9 or 9.5, I'm hoping for deeper character work, more layered dialogue, and those "holy crap" moments that leave you desperate for the next episode. If they can hit those marks, this could become the show we've all been waiting for since the GoT finale.
8/10 - might get to 9.5/10.
Watching James Gunn's Superman felt like stepping into a movie made specifically for Gen Z and younger audiences-something tailored to be loud, fast, visually overstimulating, and ultimately forgettable. It plays out as a popcorn flick meant for families who want a one-time experience, not a lasting impression. Unfortunately, for a character as iconic and emotionally rich as Superman, this approach feels not only underwhelming but borderline disrespectful.
Visual and Narrative Disarray
From the start, the film feels visually chaotic. The pacing is jittery, and scenes often transition with little coherence. Plotlines begin and vanish without resolution, and I found myself trying to connect dots that just weren't there. Rather than pulling me into a cohesive world, the film pushed me out with its narrative disarray. It genuinely looked like a mess-left to right, top to bottom.
And the CGI? A complete mess. Certain scenes were so over-reliant on effects that they looked like something out of a rushed streaming series rather than a blockbuster intended to reboot one of cinema's most beloved superheroes. It's as if no one double-checked the final render.
Directorial Style Doesn't Fit Superman
James Gunn has a unique directorial style, and while it works brilliantly for irreverent, ensemble-driven films (Guardians of the Galaxy, for example), it just doesn't translate well here. Superman is not a character who thrives in chaos and cheeky banter; he's about hope, restraint, legacy, and internal struggle. Gunn's interpretation strips away that depth in favor of pop-culture-infused spectacle and shallow emotional beats.
I want to be clear: this is a subjective take, not an attack or a biased rant. But this kind of movie-making-where the tone can't decide if it's quirky, serious, or emotionally grounded-just doesn't suit Superman.
David Corenswet Deserved Better
The biggest missed opportunity here is David Corenswet. He genuinely acts. His performance carried the weight of someone who could truly define the role for a generation. Sadly, he was given flat, awkward lines and not enough meaningful screen time to bring his version of Clark Kent to life. You could see the potential-his posture, his emotional range-but the script simply didn't rise to meet him.
They did him dirty, plain and simple.
That Suit... and Everything Else
Even visually, Superman's new suit feels off-it looks cartoonish, exaggerated, almost like cosplay. It's hard to take a character seriously when he doesn't even look like the hero we know and respect. In contrast, previous versions-whether it was Christopher Reeve's timeless charm or Henry Cavill's brooding elegance-nailed both performance and presence. Here, it's neither.
One and Done
There's no emotional resonance that would make me want to return to this film. Like so many generic blockbusters today, it's a "one and done" experience. There's no iconic moment, no lasting impact, no urge to rewatch. For a Superman reboot, that's a massive failure. They had the chance to rebuild this symbol of hope and leadership-and instead, they rushed out a product that feels like it was built for social media clips and summer ticket sales.
The Bigger Picture: Why Can't DC Get It Right?
It's baffling at this point. Why does DC keep fumbling? Why can't they craft a long-term, emotionally grounded, interconnected storyline the way Marvel once did? Instead of building slowly and giving characters space to grow, they keep trying to force impact in a single film. Superman deserves better. Fans deserve better.
---
Final Thoughts:
James Gunn's Superman tries to do too much with too little, and in the process, loses everything that makes the Man of Steel iconic. A confusing story, messy CGI, and poor use of a very talented lead actor turn what could have been a cinematic milestone into just another forgettable reboot.
5/10 Already forgot about it...
Visual and Narrative Disarray
From the start, the film feels visually chaotic. The pacing is jittery, and scenes often transition with little coherence. Plotlines begin and vanish without resolution, and I found myself trying to connect dots that just weren't there. Rather than pulling me into a cohesive world, the film pushed me out with its narrative disarray. It genuinely looked like a mess-left to right, top to bottom.
And the CGI? A complete mess. Certain scenes were so over-reliant on effects that they looked like something out of a rushed streaming series rather than a blockbuster intended to reboot one of cinema's most beloved superheroes. It's as if no one double-checked the final render.
Directorial Style Doesn't Fit Superman
James Gunn has a unique directorial style, and while it works brilliantly for irreverent, ensemble-driven films (Guardians of the Galaxy, for example), it just doesn't translate well here. Superman is not a character who thrives in chaos and cheeky banter; he's about hope, restraint, legacy, and internal struggle. Gunn's interpretation strips away that depth in favor of pop-culture-infused spectacle and shallow emotional beats.
I want to be clear: this is a subjective take, not an attack or a biased rant. But this kind of movie-making-where the tone can't decide if it's quirky, serious, or emotionally grounded-just doesn't suit Superman.
David Corenswet Deserved Better
The biggest missed opportunity here is David Corenswet. He genuinely acts. His performance carried the weight of someone who could truly define the role for a generation. Sadly, he was given flat, awkward lines and not enough meaningful screen time to bring his version of Clark Kent to life. You could see the potential-his posture, his emotional range-but the script simply didn't rise to meet him.
They did him dirty, plain and simple.
That Suit... and Everything Else
Even visually, Superman's new suit feels off-it looks cartoonish, exaggerated, almost like cosplay. It's hard to take a character seriously when he doesn't even look like the hero we know and respect. In contrast, previous versions-whether it was Christopher Reeve's timeless charm or Henry Cavill's brooding elegance-nailed both performance and presence. Here, it's neither.
One and Done
There's no emotional resonance that would make me want to return to this film. Like so many generic blockbusters today, it's a "one and done" experience. There's no iconic moment, no lasting impact, no urge to rewatch. For a Superman reboot, that's a massive failure. They had the chance to rebuild this symbol of hope and leadership-and instead, they rushed out a product that feels like it was built for social media clips and summer ticket sales.
The Bigger Picture: Why Can't DC Get It Right?
It's baffling at this point. Why does DC keep fumbling? Why can't they craft a long-term, emotionally grounded, interconnected storyline the way Marvel once did? Instead of building slowly and giving characters space to grow, they keep trying to force impact in a single film. Superman deserves better. Fans deserve better.
---
Final Thoughts:
James Gunn's Superman tries to do too much with too little, and in the process, loses everything that makes the Man of Steel iconic. A confusing story, messy CGI, and poor use of a very talented lead actor turn what could have been a cinematic milestone into just another forgettable reboot.
5/10 Already forgot about it...
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