Yes. It always is.
Yes. It always is.
I hate the dialog in those films. It's coarse and rough and irritating and it shows up everywhere.
"Don't you die on me! You're a fighter, dammit!"
Does anyone notice how often the line, "Stay with me!" gets yelled at any dying character by any non dying character? It's ridiculous!
A diversion!
God, SO many from "The Last Airbender" but the one that stands out has to be "we fell under the water of the ocean."
So how about running down all the clever, well tied together plot points the author missed?
I heard on the radio this morning it cleared $90 million. If that's correct, it's definitely a success and they'll definitely keep going.
If by "complex" you mean "ridiculously cluttered" and by "unconventional" you mean "nonsensical," then I have to concur, The Amazing Spider-Man had an extremely complex and unconventional story.
So let's make sure all comic book movies are nonsensical messes forever!
Honestly, I find these types of movies the hardest to watch. When they get so much right and so much wrong at the same time? Clearly someone—the director, the actors, the art staff, etc.—was trying hard to make something good, and yet you can feel a cynical, play-it-safe presence overriding the great film that's…
AoS suffered from poor writing. Its terrible first half had nothing to do with not being able to divulge the Hydra reveal, it had everything to do with terrible filler episodes, boring wooden characters and dialogue, and a terribly dated tone that was neither spy show or comic book adaptation. It was an 80's genre…
I can't wait to watch an entire season devoted to Poison Ivy getting her doctorate or lil' Riddler doing book after book of crosswords in the back of his mom's station wagon!
Those guys over there are making MONEY RABBLE RABBLE RABBLE!!! We wanna make money TOO WHA! RABBLE RABBLE RABBLE!! Copy copy rabble?! COPY THEM RABBLE RABBLE RABBLE!!! MOAR MONEY MOAR MONEY!!!!
You needn't have created something to be the best at it. BTW, who did start the trend?
The amount of out-loud confusion in-theater during this preview was ridiculous. It ranged from 'do they not understand how Marvel movies are inter-linked?' to 'why the fuck are the X-Men in a Spider-Man movie?' to 'is this for the next Avengers?' to 'are these the villains for the next movie?'
I feel your pain. My friends & I (all in late 20s to early 30s) were just talking about how when we think 10 years ago, we still think it's the 90s....
I always think "1999 was just about 4 years ago" - nope.
As you all enter the party...