BlueSeraph
BlueSeraph
BlueSeraph

Speaking about the movie by itself, despite it’s flaws it was a huge success. But saying it saved movie theaters, nah. Spider-Man had a more successful run against the odds than Top Gun. But I wouldn’t say it solved the cinema problem and neither did Top Gun. But with home viewing, streaming, and people’s

I see your point, but don’t understand the relevance here on this. James Cameron stated in an interview himself about how Avatar 2, not the back to back sequels combined, but just Avatar 2 needs to make a couple of billion to break even. Plenty of movies can be loved but not hit the financial goal. And in this case

It’s just a matter of preference for people whether you agree with it or not. I personally feel indifferent to the success of Avatar. If it does succeed, great, if not, meh. Filmmakers/studios mistakes are that they tell everyone they plan to make sequels or leave the movie incomplete because they believe it will be

- “But based on these impressions from the first wave of viewers, it seems that hitmaker James Cameron has indeed made another hit.”

The concept has been done many a times. I would see it, but not because it’s a novel idea. Far from it. I would see it in hopes that it takes that concept and does it well. It’s all about the execution. This premise is done poorly more often than done well. The 6th Day or Gemini Man were done poorly. But if done

I don’t disagree with any of that. If he was debating or arguing this, then you and mostly everyone else would win the argument with your counterpoints.

Looking at it from a practical sense, it seems it was a simple deal breaker during negotiations. The studio wanted him, but they wouldn’t budge on the vaccine issue and neither would he. So an agreement couldn’t be reached. And that was that. From a business stance, there’s no controversy.

I can understand Hemsworth as an actor wanting Thor to go into another direction. He’s played the role about a dozen times both live action and voice over. Given the general response to Love and Thunder and where he is with his life now, it make sense that he’s hesitant to return. Or he would like to kind of finally

On the one hand, how season 4 ended I could see as a series finale that ends with ambiguity. How it got there wasn’t the best way but now it’s kind of unintentionally funny because I could use it as an analogy of the HBO/Discovery merger. Zaslav is the Man in Black and activated the code for all the staff and shows to

No denying that. It is wildly disappointing when a movie has a great premise and terrible execution. There have been other movies that ended up the same way.

Everyone has different tastes of what they enjoy from a horror movie. There are a large number of people that enjoy bad horror movies, and straight up gory movies. And you have the slow burn movies. The jump scare movies. The creepy atmospheric movies and so on. Torture porn movies. Like the color red, horror movies

This isn’t the first movie to have this kind of a premise. I remember there was another movie a few years ago called The Discovery. Not a great movie but it’s premise makes me believe given the current state of things in this world, we would see a global breakdown of society. Maybe even an accelerated extinction of

I know there are examples where method acting is taken to the extreme or is too over the top. Leto is primarily used as the poster boy for what’s wrong with method acting these days. But I believe most actors that use it are still good coworkers. And I believe most actors that use it know when to be responsible if it

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As long as the first episode ends with this epilogue joke with Hal waking up from a nightmare...

Regarding his point of view on characters in big movies, I can’t agree with him on this, because it’s a matter of perspective. I enjoyed Terminator not because of any family dynamic, because I just wanted to see machine fight and blow shit up. Same deal with Aliens. If anything I wasn’t a fan of the family dynamic

I agree with Fishburne. It wasn’t terrible, but not great. More forgettable. I really did want to love it, but it’s a one time watch at best. I did like the beginning, the whole freeing Agent Morpheus from the video game in the Matrix kind of deal I guess. I did love the Keanu Reeves and Carrie Anne Moss trying to

I did enjoy Rogue One. Never had any interest in this show or the character. Still don’t. I’m now at a place to pick and choose which show to watch regarding Star Wars. I watched the Clone Wars, but never saw Star Wars Rebels. I’ve watched Mandalorian, and Book of Boba Fett, but passed on OB1. 

Good on the success he found with his work, I’m just not a fan of his work. Never found him entertaining. I can think of other actors and character actors that would make for a better Mephisto. But, if Disney/Marvel decide to go with this, then it is what it is. 

Regarding Daredevil on She-Hulk, I thought it was fine for what it was. It was great to see Charlie Cox again. It wasn’t his show, so it made sense that the character was more light hearted and even the brief fighting was less brutal and just cool looking.

I’ve mentioned this before regarding other shows. Depending on the viewer some shows are worth watching on a weekly basis, and some shows are better off just binging. It’s just a preference. In the end, the way some shows are made, they’re better off being binged. Of course there are some shows that are great