Almost any Peter Weller movie goes there. Just a bit too far...
Almost any Peter Weller movie goes there. Just a bit too far...
Fairly close to what would really happen if a mentally unstable man became a vigilante. But some of the hallucinations and...stuff...with Ellen Paige's Bolty went a little far into "WTF" territory.
Blue Velvet.
Gonna have to go with The Mist's Ending.
How about not starting a story until you have the ending in mind?
Cameo? He oughtta replace Ben Affleck as the 'older, grimmer Batman'!
Not that the original didn't have its very strong points, but Star Trek: The Next Generation really did improve and expand upon both the setting and the quality of the narrative in ways that we now pretty much take for granted.
I'm leaving this here because I really liked this version despite already loving the Wayne version.
Let's ignore "Into Darkness" for a minute... 2009 Star Trek was a reboot fans and audience alike needed. Proof to Paramount that Trek was still a pop culture phenomenon. Proof that it could be exciting after Nemesis and Enterprise sank the franchise.
Dredd
I'm not a zombie movie fan in the first place, so the show needs something more than zombie killing to keep me watching. Watching pathetic idiots doing stupid risky things all the time is not worth my attention.
Sounds like The Walking Dead... Stopped watching that, so i guess i shouldn't start watching this.
Not that disagree with the findings or anything, but I would want to know what "multiple" meant, amongst other things before calling it scientific.
No, actually that's not scientific at all. The novelty of having grandmothers (or hell, grandmothers and cookies like at the GoG booth) is enough to get more people by than anything else. There have been knowledgeable and attractive booth babes before. This is not "scientific proof" of anything. This was on Kotaku as…
As an Iron Man fan i have to say i was pro Trevor. He WAS the Mandarin.. menacing up until the reveal. then he was Trevor Slattery who i also liked... funny bloake
Well not necessarily because remember, the guy sat down right next to the Manager/Woman/Whatever that was one of Bruce Willis's superiors. I just took as she got him in the end.
So, let's take stock of the ending of this movie. Rob Corddry's character remains in the past in order to change the future in his friend's favour. Arriving back in the future, John Cusack finds himself happily married to Lizzy Caplan (lucky boy), and Craig Robinson is the head of a successful record label. Happy…
There are better choices, but this film caught me at the right age. A young hopeful, kid giddy about watching a sequel to his favorite sci-fi genre and then this happens.
Jacob's Ladder. As if someone pulled the ground away beneath your feet.
Yes, they went for the 'there is still hope' angle, but damn that was dark even so.