akaneskiryu
akaneskiryu
akaneskiryu

I remembered really liking Eight Legged Freaks in the theater, but on subsequent rewatches I didn’t like it as much. I liked the gibbering Gremlins-esque spiders but David Arquette and the “old lady who says crude things” that started to become a cliche of these movies got really annoying.

I enjoyed Cabin in the Woods far more. I feel like the general premise of Tucker and Dale would’ve worked better if it was shorter.

Sometimes Stephen Sommers really needs to operate on the basis that there *won’t* be a sequel. I mean, I loved the ending and yeah, I would like to see the thing, but he seems to direct every movie of his like there will be an obvious sequel and when a sequel does happen, it’s usually pretty poor in comparison.

If only most monster movies had such memorable lines as “You mean there’s snakes out there this big?”, “Is it a crime to wish the chewing of law enforcement?” or “Who died and made you Einstein?”

Is that the one with the thing that looked like a boss from one of the Zelda games and that one guys dies from rapid decompression or something? If so, I remember falling asleep during it thinking “Leviathan was so much better.”

While I wasn’t a fan of Guardians of the Galaxy, Super is way more James Gunn’s usual obnoxious and gross style. I always knew he wouldn’t get to go full tilt but he did still get to slip a few of his “quirks” in. (The Gamora “whore” line for one. Ugh.)

I still don’t remember how I found this film (I think maybe the trailer was on the VHS for Phantoms?) but I loved it so much and watched it many times. I should actually rewatch it, it has been a long time.

I actually liked Defendor a lot and not just in comparison to Super. This article has actually inspired me to rewatch Defendor and keep trying to forget the revulsion I felt watching Super.

I have never gotten the off putting feeling I got from Super from anything related to The Tick. I love The Tick, it’s a weird mix of goofy comic book homage and parody.

This has been on my list of movies to see for a long while. Thanks for reminding me.

Yeah, that was how I felt afterwards. Parts of it were pretty damn good, but a lot of it is just emotionally exhausting and not in a what I’d call a good way.

Wait... The Binding of Isaac: Afterbirth was on sale for $6.66 for pre-order and the first day of release. So, what the fuck?

Sadly, I think the last non-Lego Avengers game was a pretty subpar Wii title which sold pretty poorly. Disney/Marvels are probably just happy to let Traveler’s Tales churn out Lego games which are a safe bet and put out games in proven formats (the free-to-play/mobile games and whatever you call the toy based

Aw, dammit. When I first saw this I was like “oh, well, whatever, not like anything was lost.” Now I’m actually debating playing it just to hear Kamala. Maybe it will be one of the lucky free to play games that factors in the initial dis—what am I saying, of course it won’t.

For the cosmic stuff, I’d start off with Annihilation and then read through all of Abnett and Lanning’s cosmic stuff starting with Annihilation Conquest and ending with The Thanos Imperative. (There’s plenty of reading lists out there that will tell you all the comics involved in this.) This was my first foray into

SNOWFLAME DISAGREES!

That’s something I’ve felt the movie hasn’t gotten. It seems it’s more interested in referencing Deadpool himself, then having Deadpool be the fountain of pop culture references he usually is. It actually seems like their answer has been to shove in “adult” shock humor in place of Deadpool’s usual tone.

This has been exactly my feelings. It just feels like it’s trying too hard and has none of the cleverness of Deadpool in the comics. I still don’t even see why Deadpool needs to be R aside from (maybe) the violence.

I’d like to think so, but The IT Crowd also features one of the most cringe-worthy transphobic episodes I’ve ever seen and I’ve never watched a minute of it after that.

Again, I fail to see what was even R-rated about Deadpool in the comics besides the violence and the trailers only convinced me that the answer was “mid-2000's Judd Apatow crass humor” which doesn’t really jive with the pop culture laden and puntastic Deadpool I like. Knowing that there’s an unrated cut that pushes it