Disney gets Spider-Man, Fox gets his arch-nemesis, everything works out.
Disney gets Spider-Man, Fox gets his arch-nemesis, everything works out.
It makes me grumpy because Singer's generally small-scale interpersonal "disasters" should have set up for a different kind of movie entirely when introducing a truly global threat. Maybe it still will, but the trailers don't suggest it.
One complaint I don't get is about this movie treating villains as heroes when driven to desperate measures. It's been a theme in every one of Singer's sequels to the first movie, that freaks may stab each other in the back out of despair but they have to stick together.
Romjin's character also played a big role in Singer's earlier films, albeit one with fewer lines. Ratner and Vaughn picked up on that and used it, and while I didn't like either movie much, Singer seems to like Vaughn's. Lawrence's growing profile seems more like a convenient coincidence turned into synergy than…
I think it's still easier to sell audiences on that with a character who's a man, or at least it's perceived that way. Female stars are still supposed to make people see sparkles, with their careers potentially on the line.
Backflip Unnecessary For Drum Solo: Not News
Backflip Necessary For Drum Solo: News
He hasn't usually worn a helmet, but I never saw that cartoon.
So?
That's quite a bit different given that a lot of Americans at any given time between now and the late 1930s have known who Superman is.
You seem to believe that Wolverine was used to meet a preexisting story requirement of "time travel into the body of your past self" rather than the other way around.
Oh, we're changing topics now?
I enjoyed herding fantasy cattle. Following a light source through a poison gas cloud before the first dungeon, not so much.
It's amazing how every bit of itself Nintendo put into the market for close to a decade, from its litigation to its technology, was built to maintain a commercial monopoly where all third parties where at its beck & call on the smallest details.
I enjoyed sailing around that lonely world a lot. The Triforce quests, that Chu quest, it was all a good way to get me to explore the map.
Now you're rolling back a comment where you made some good points, just to be "right". That's not needed. The point is, the changing POV on the two games comes from the history of video games over the years, not atemporal complaining.
I played both. I prefer the Gamecube controller, but they weren't much different.
They've done it a couple times, as far back as Link's Awakening, even, from the first moment it's suggested that Link's quest is to destroy the world around you, not save it.
One of its best parts, too, which surprised me given how she was presented in the lackluster pre-series commercials.
This show seems to be going places but this episode reminded me it has limited time to get there.
And for all the same reasons, which makes me wonder who greenlit this and to what country they fled afterwards.