Not exact matches
Several men on horseback threaten another group of people and
gunfire is exchanged (we see blood spurt from wounds and men fall off their horses); a woman and a teen girl are shot and a man hobbles away from the
scene but is caught by another man and killed
with a knife (we hear the blow and see the attacker covered
with blood afterwards).
The fateful preview footage depicted mobsters spraying moviegoers
with gunfire and the studio was quick to remove the
scene from the movie and put back the release date from last September.
From March's twelve - year - old daughter Holly (Angourie Rice) spewing out lines that Black and Anthony Bagarozzi seem to have written solely for shock value, to several grotesque
scenes of head - bashing and bone - cracking, to countless inexplicable and pointless deaths by
gunfire, the film was too extreme and thoughtless
with its violence for my taste.
The sound of violence is prevalent
with gunfire, the use of a samurai sword, knife work, and glass shattering taking over
scenes instead of dialogue.
Like all Madefire comics, Batman: Arkham Origins uses very limited animation, such as flat figures sliding across the panel, speech balloons that pop up, or slight rotation of the
scene to give a 3D effect, along
with sound effects (mostly doomy music and
gunfire).