BlueSeraph
BlueSeraph
BlueSeraph

At this point, it really doesn’t matter. They either retconn it, remake it, go full blown supernatural with it, even go meta with it. It’s a Halloween movie. There will be more. As for will it be a direct sequel to these last 3 movies? Probably not. The studio probably will go in a different direction given the

I saw the movie. And this isn’t about liking it or not, this is about the director’s argument in believing Universal/Blumhouse killed the movie by releasing in cinemas and on streaming. I’m agreeing with most of the posts on here. I believe in a case by case basis, and in this case, David Gordon Green points for his

In that regard, sure. This is how he feels, and it hasn’t changed in decades. Maybe one day, but this is just how he feels regarding this topic and he’ll make it known whenever someone interviews him. He doesn’t need anyone’s approval, just like nobody needs his approval to agree or disagree with him to a certain exten

My point is social media, religion and now politics make for a better case than what Alan Moore is saying. He’s not wrong, I’m just not agreeing with him or how the article is written singling out superheroes. If he included those that came before superheroes then that’s another deal. Or if he said it’s going to

I kind of get what he saying, but I just don’t agree. I think religion and social media are the bigger driving force that don’t really need superheroes. Maybe 80's action Machismo movies more so for the dictators and strong men in leadership roles is a close second that’s a precursor. If you’re going to use

I liked season 1 enough. The last two episodes though were very season 1 Next Generation quality, so that kind of killed it, but it was a fun escape enough during the the beginning of the pandemic. I binged season 2 instead of watching it weekly and found it barely tolerable. Meaning it deserves the hate for those

And the director pretty much felt the same way. He didn’t want to even try to redo those movies. So, I knew it wasn’t a remake, and it altered my expectations. I had no reason to really compare this movie to the original series. So my only expectations were, can this entertain me. And it did well enough for me. 

I just finished watching it. I will say this was pretty good, and the director was true to his word that this was pretty much it’s own animal. It has its flaws, but it’s forgivable. It is a very elaborate twisted faustian deal movie. And like all faustian deals, the first rule when dealing with the devil: don’t.

Well in regards of Scott going through all that crap, I saw it as Scott had this unrealistic vision of Ramona as his dream girl with expectations of happily ever after with her. Then as the movie progressed the reality of being with Ramona started to sink in. She came out of a toxic relationship, and her past

I remember when I first saw the movie, I liked it fine. Then I got the special edition that included a whole bunch of features including deleted scenes and an alternate ending. I spliced in a lot of those scenes, and changed the ending to where Scott ends up with Knives. Now I love that movie...at least the re-edited

You know what, fine. If it’s going to be a reimagining that has no direct connections to Hellraiser 1 and 2, then that’s fine by me. If the goal is to try to stand on its own and be a different animal, best of luck to it, and I will check it out.

I always saw it as more of a siren than just a puzzle for only those few seeking it. I remember a line from either part 2 or part 3 where Kristen says it wants to be solved. So, I always believed it was an indiscriminate object for all that comes across it. Whether they seek it out, or stumble upon it by chance.

It is what it is. It’s not the first time a movie has been well received by both critics, and those that did see the movie enjoyed it, and yet still failed financially in the box office. I’m still upset about Dredd, a violent scifi movie that was well reviewed by critics, had good reaction from audiences but was

I’m just not usually a fan of romcoms. 


Well, it’s production looks great. I do like the cast. I’m sure they put in the best effort into it. But just like the game, I need to be in right mood to watch something that bleak. Since HBO Max releases on a weekly basis, I’ll check it out after the season is over and just binge all the episodes. It be different if

Yeah. Missing out on the 15 minute edit. Then again the character of John Hammond playing Fetch probably would’ve been more funny.

If you liked it good for you. I went in not knowing anything or what to expect, except that it was a comedy and a continuation to a Chevy Chase movie. We may disagree, but it still didn’t entertain me. The jokes didn’t make me laugh. The execution of the plot was a bit sloppy. The story overall wasn’t fun or

Sorry, the 15 minute expired before I could fix it.

I never saw the other Fletch movies. When I saw this, I wasn’t sure if the character Fletch was always like that or Hammond was trying very hard to act like Chevy Chase. Either way he just came off as if he’s going through the motions sleepwalking. I just didn’t find it funny, and not very entertaining. But it wasn’t