This. The show was a bloodless exercise in dot-connecting. Kid Leia was the one interesting choice they made, though they wrote her really poorly.
This. The show was a bloodless exercise in dot-connecting. Kid Leia was the one interesting choice they made, though they wrote her really poorly.
I agree only because Leia was consistently one of the better parts of a show that was filled with amateur hour writing. I really hope we see her actress in Starwars (or in general) more often. That said, let’s not pretend that a show about Luke messing around with Biggs and constantly nearly dying only for Obi Wan to…
Obi-Wan Kenobi was a show filled with memorable fan-favorite moments
Ewan McGregor said that the story was originally about his character and that other Skywalker sibling. “It was going to be a story about me and Luke,” McGregor said. “It was always going to be that, and that was one of the genius moments where everyone went, ‘Wait a minute,’ and then changed it.”
“It was going to be a story about me and Luke,” McGregor said. “It was always going to be that, and that was one of the genius moments where everyone went, ‘Wait a minute,’ and then changed it.”
I kinda don’t. 2.5 hrs of just plain action Batman gets boring fast (Can we put a moratorium on Frank Miller esque influence) and given that setup from the Luthor scene in JL I do not want to see another version of Knightfall starting Deathstroke . Glad we’re getting Detective Batman.
Frank Gorshin would like a word. He is the only reason people liked him in the first place!
“But. . . but . . . multiverse!” splutters a WB exec as he reads your comment in between platters of coke.
I was reading this as “ you might not like our Flash but out polling says you LOVE Keaton in that Spiderman movie AND you still love his Batman so by the transitive property . . . . you will LOVE our Flash movie with twice the Batman!”
“One of the youngest Dark Knights we’ve seen”
Sick of this violent mess. Now we get to see the young ‘crusader’ (that’s great) act pissed all of the time - again. No thanks. Rage is losing its fascination for a lot of people.
Seriously. I’ve never understood the “visual genius” thing for Snyder. Very identifiable, sure, but poor framing and depth, thanks to muddled CGI and a lack of clear lines. This though? This is truly stunning on a visual level, with on-set light providing interesting contrasts and silhouettes and the like.
I still cannot get over the idea of STARTING the flash movies with Flashpoint, the story where you need to both know the character and his history AND be invested in what happens to the character.
Good. No movie is.worth getting sick over.
Seeing a movie called “No Time to Die” when you can literally die because you went to the theatre would make for poor headlines.
“MG: I just like things to move when I watch TV. I like stuff to happen. I don’t like that feeling where you think, “They’ve stretched this thing out over 10 episodes, and it’s really people having the same conversations over and over when it’s like, ‘No, let’s go forward. Let’s not be afraid to know that there’s…
Totally fair, the show took a lot of turns past its initial “wait, this heaven is actually hell” premise. I think it was always about the human condition and the nature of people moreso than actual morality or the afterlife - one of my favorite scenes was in the season 2 finale when after Eleanor was put back on Earth…
Am I the only one who thought the ending to the show should have ended literally one episode before the actual last one? Or, like, right when Eleanor walked through the door, leaving it ambiguous as to what happens? Knowing what the actual real fate of them turned out to be just was kind of...well...depressing.…
When he yelled WAKANDA FOREVER! in Civil War I felt it right in the spine. I believed.
Captain America: Civil War (2016)