What a fucking joke.
What a fucking joke.
Kilgrave and Bullseye from the [REDACTED] shows are obvious choices.
I’d love to see Sam and Bucky taking on a version of Zola - either a copy that was made by SHIELD or a version of him that was transmitted out into the wider world before the missile strike somehow - that had no physical location at all.
I spotted some Man-Thing. Everyone loves a bit of Man-Thing.
It’s the incredibly bad faith, “if we give them this they might use it do so something we disapprove of, therefore they shouldn’t have it”, argument that I find particularly interesting (for a given value of “interesting”).
It’s better than their original choices, Army, Navy, and Surplus.
But this is a half-hour comedy that’s kinda lazy about plotting...
As someone who still enjoys a good zombie movie (emphasis on “good” there) I have to say, most of these... aren’t?
Yeah, it really was a great big bowl of “meh”.
You know what would be even better?
I... liked this?
Oh, there certainly was critique... but, as you said, it was more about Marvel apparently wanting her to be slimmer and more “traditionally” feminine (something which has been confirmed by those involved, as it happened) rather than anything to do with “ownership over women’s bodies”.
Yes please.
It really is a fantastic film - I remember the early reviews for it were all clearly a case of “let’s copy each other so we can say there’s a critical consensus” but after watching it it was very clear that, in their rush to agree with each other and pat themselves on the back, most of them had missed the point…
Actually... put him in some red make-up and give him some horns and I definitely could see Bruce Campbell as Mephisto.
Rahul Kohli for Reed. You know it makes sense.
Mutants living on their own island and just not caring about the outside world is an interesting concept...
Wow, I have read a lot of these. That’s kind of cool. Adding the ones I haven’t read to my reading list!
Skip Logan and go straight to Laura?
Author Paul Tremblay has revealed to CNBC that M. Night Shyamalan’s mysterious new project Knock at the Cabin is actually “a direct film adaptation” of his novel The Cabin at the End of the World.