Neimad a écrit:Mince je m'étais fait à l'idée de ne pas regarder. Mais là si c'est dispo sur Netflix je n'ai plus d'excuses. Le monde est injuste parfois.
LMO42 a écrit:Mais Starfire je ne peux pas la voir sérieusement, ses cheveux plastique perruque disco et sa fourrure me font à chaque fois exploser de rire).
sparky4 a écrit:Donc ce sera sur netflix ? quel intérêt de payer la plateforme DC universe alors?
math7777 a écrit:Rogue One a écrit:sparky4 a écrit:Donc ce sera sur netflix ? quel intérêt de payer la plateforme DC universe alors?
le seul intérêt c'est.. le reste ? x)
Ils vont certainement acheter toutes les séries de la plateforme.
Adanedhel a écrit:Espérons qu'ils aient le budget pour acheter des projecteurs…
Neimad a écrit:Adanedhel a écrit:Espérons qu'ils aient le budget pour acheter des projecteurs…
Merci Ada, c'est beau.
Titans has been the superhero show that has been to hell and back again. It was stuck in development for years and just when all seemed lost, Akiva Goldsman and Geoff Johns took the Titans and brought them to DC’s streaming service, giving them new life. The show immediately pushed through development as casting and details were released. Some things were taken well and others not so much. There was a serious uproar over the casting of Anna Diop as Starfire due to the race-bending of the character. As time went on, we got to see first looks at the actors in costume, and their looks were unconventional, to say the least, especially Starfire’s. But, that was the least of their problems. The first official trailer for Titans made its debut at San Diego Comic-Con this past July and the reactions were terrible. People thought the series would be a horrible mess, but fret not my friends — after seeing the first few episodes, I can now say that it is great.
The series follows Batman’s former sidekick Dick Grayson as a young girl named Raven comes into his life and he has to protect her. Raven is the magnet that draws the team and danger in. Where the show succeeds in is the dynamic and relationships between the characters and how they all unite to protect a girl they’re all connected to.
Brenton Thwaites stars as Dick Grayson, a.k.a. Robin, and when he’s on screen, you just want more of him. He’s everything you’d want Dick Grayson to be: complicated, broody and badass. The scenes he shares with Teagan Croft are where he shines the most and every action scene involving Robin is the some of the best stunt work I’ve ever seen on superhero TV. Croft is definitely the breakout of the series as she takes this role of a young girl that has complications such as having demonic powers and humanizes her enough to have me feeling bad for her. She takes the Raven role and makes it her own and totally crushes it. She basically steals every scene she’s in.
Anna Diop as Starfire is interesting to see because her situation in the series makes her an interesting mystery that you want to see unravel. Diop completely kills it in the role and leads you on just enough to want more of her as Starfire. The reasoning for her meeting up with the team is solid and I’m looking forward to the future of this character. Ryan Potter as Beast Boy is cool. We don’t see much of him in the beginning, but the visual effects for his shape-shifts are really good.
Meanwhile, Minka Kelly and Alan Ritchson are perfect as Hawk and Dove. Their relationship is a focal point of the second episode and their history with Dick Grayson is very interesting. The villains of the series are part of some cult that wants Raven to release her father and will not stop until they get her. There’s a psychotic family that really gets the drop on the team. At least from what I’ve seen so far, the antagonists are kind of weak, but all in all the series itself is great.
Overall thoughts: What starts out a bit slow develops into great superhero TV. The casting, acting and production quality are top notch. If the first trailer pushed you away, just give the series a chance and it will win you over. Titans is definitely not for young kids, so parents beware. I actually liked Titans so much I couldn’t put in down. I’d definitely watch more than one season of this so I look forward to what’s to come. If you’re looking for good TV, this is it. Titans is the DC Comics series that you’ve been waiting for.
Score: 9/10
ROY a écrit:Apparemment, la série Titans a beaucoup plu à ceux qui ont vu les premiers épisodes à la New York Comic Con.
Collider a écrit:In DC Universe’s Titans, Dick Grayson (Brenton Thwaites) stabs a guy in the balls with a pair of garden shears. Unfortunately, the powers that be say I have to write more than that sentence about Titans, but I do truly think every aspect of this show—its tone, its aesthetic, its story, its themes—boil down to the image of Dick Grayson, the original Robin, Boy Wonder, charming vigilante do-gooder, plunging a gardening tool into another man’s crotch. Titans is the absolute zenith of the post-Nolan, post-Dark Knight era of “mature” comic book storytelling, a show with both the grittiness and enjoyability factor of sandpaper. It’s Riverdale with zero self-awareness. Gotham without a whiff of fun. It’s Arrow if The CW allowed for gratuitous, minutes-long shots of dudes getting beaten with a stick. All put together, Titans lands just about as gracefully as The Flying Graysons.
IGN a écrit:The Titans series premiere is an indecisive mix of fun, comics-inspired moments and gratuitous violence, which makes it hard to get a read on what kind of show it wants to be. When the series focuses on its characters and not trying to shock or scare us, it’s an engaging ride – like a fledgling sidekick, it just needs to learn a little more discipline before it’s allowed on the streets unsupervised.
CBR a écrit:It’s dark, just as the trailers indicate, with a level of violence that races past anything on The CW’s Arrowverse and teeters into Zack Snyder-era DC Extended Universe territory. Heroes maim and kill, with some frequency, in the three episodes provided for review, although not always on purpose. It goes without saying, then, that Titans isn’t suitable for young viewers, who aren’t the target audience for this streaming service anyway. However, neither is the series aimed at fans of DC’s classic New Teen Titans, who will undoubtedly bristle at the tone and quibble with the characterizations, to say nothing of the lineup (a later episode is titled “Donna Troy,” which may salve that particular wound). Yet, for all of those caveats, there is something enjoyable about Titans.
Newsarama a écrit:The thing that probably most sets Titans apart from other iterations of the DCU on film is the violence that’s on display. More than anything, it feels completely out of line with the characters in general. Dick Grayson’s angst-fueled alleyway fight scene is entertaining until it gets to the point where he’s almost gleefully running a thug’s face across the jagged edges of a shattered car window. Who is this character? Certainly not the Dick Grayson that audiences might be familiar with. And that really undercuts the serious tone of the show, the violence isn’t scary or intense – it goes so far that’s almost just goofy.
Forbes a écrit:What we get in Titans is a show very much making a statement about what it wants to be. It wouldn’t pair well with the likes of Greg Berlanti’s Arrowverse (despite the fact he is one of the co-creators of Titans), but it also doesn’t belong next to the Snyder-fueled DCEU. Rather, Titans falls somewhere in between. And it’s this fact that will ultimately make or break the series in the long run.
The Washington Post a écrit:“Titans” isn’t up to par with a Netflix/Marvel superhero streaming experience. But there are enough things they could do to take it to that level if this series plays its cards right.
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