If you hate the game, and you're not interested in it at all, why stay, exactly? I just want to understand Comment by Zeroxar on T00:59:43-05:00 I try to stay away from Reddit and these wowhead comments like everyone used to avoid the wow forums back in the day, but I slipped tonight. I have to wonder, honestly, if you hate the game, why are you here? I'm honestly not trying to offend, but lately the hate coming from people for no reason is really starting to bother me. That was before I started hating the game though. And I purchased it on Blu-ray basically to promote/support more movies. I actually thought it was a decent movie on many levels, but not on all obviously. Visually is was perfect and aside from the story mishaps it was really great Comment by Zularis on T00:55:39-05:00 Medivh not opening a portal to free everyone and save the world etc Dalaran not floating already, Medivh not being crushed and redeemed with friendship…chop his possessed head off and drain the life from Khadgar aging him. I would have preferred a movie sticking to the lore more. for netflix standar is pretty good nerdrage still. I can't say I enjoyed the movie nor found the plot compelling but I would like to see them try their hand at animated shows. lol) Comment by primalmatter on T00:19:24-05:00 I said something, a little off, and got corrected by him. (Fun Fact: While Duncan Jones was talking about the movie two years ago. Liking the visual as well.Īlso like the fact that, as of this comment, it's still the highest-grossing video movie. Comment by regma on T00:07:54-05:00ĭespite the storylines going all over the place. I saw it on the list of movies (is Australian) and that it was actually doing quite well on the most viewed list. It may not be the most accurate retelling of the video game's massive backstory, but it boasts truly stunning visuals and visits several familiar locations, such as Stormwind City, Goldshire, Karazhan, and the Dark Portal itself. Whether Warcraft will ever visit theaters or television ever again remains to be seen, but in the meantime, the Warcraft movie is well worth the watch. The idea for a Warcraft III movie gained even more traction with a fan-made movie poster depicting English actor and Witcher star Henry Cavil as Arthas, leading to the creation of innumerable other conceptual pieces of character fan art. Telling a condensed version of World of Warcraft's backstory, originally depicted in Warcraft: Orcs and Humans, the storyline was left open for potential sequels, with director Duncan Jones outlining a trilogy involving Thrall's origin story and leading his people to Kalimdor.Īlthough the movie was not successful enough to spark these sequels, fans around the world latched onto the idea of another Warcraft movie - telling the story of Prince Arthas Menethil's fall from grace and transformation into the Lich King. Unfortunately not streaming in North America or most of Western Europe - check the full list of countries. Although considered a box-office bomb which only generated modest interest in North America and Europe, it was immensely popular in China, and still broke records as the highest-grossing film based on a video game - the first to cross $400 million in ticket sales globally. Warcraft: The Beginning is once again available on Netflix in Australia, South America, Western Europe, India, and Japan - skyrocketing to the top of the streaming service's viewership charts this week.
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