bradthebiggestdad--disqus
BradTheBiggestDad
bradthebiggestdad--disqus

Sure, another movie-length version of a Dr. Seuss book, that's in no way the stupidest idea on Earth every single goddamn time it happens

The title fairly screams "I have no insight into myself."

That's maybe not how it works. The means to the end is what produces a good performance from that particular actor, which varies from person to person. Not that most method actors would do the shit Leto has been proud of doing.

These are some fucked-up justifications for self-harm; I hope you're being semi-sarcastic or are seeing a professional who's giving you a counter-message.

If he actually wrote the book himself, that was his first mistake. Smart comics hire a ghost writer because their talents tend to work against long, involved writing projects. They are just about right for fucked-up vignettes, which don't make for a great book.

It's hard for anyone to come up with funny jokes about this title because Spider-Man really is about a guy who's an awkward nervous teen forever.

Just a reminder that anything you hear about this movie at this point is probably bullshit.

Seems likely that nothing whatsoever in the sixth Spider-Man movie in 14 years will be new or interesting, and Sony put Spider-Man in the Avengers because they're desperate, not because they want to share everything they make with Disney.

Personally I don't think this is a thing that you can associate with a group of people other than serial killers and Jared Leto.

It has possibilities to confuse the hell out of viewers if it happens in one movie.

Michael Keaton loves only the sea.

Jared "Just Try And Replace Me In The Middle Of Filming" Leto

The best Godzilla movie by far is the first one, where he is a sympathetic but utterly destructive monster. The closer he gets to being a hero, the worse the films become, and I don't think it's a coincidence. And for that matter, in Japan, "he" is an "it", at least in that first, best movie.

One of the best ways to find comic books for kids is to look back to the era when comic books were mainly pitched to kids. When I was younger, I wore out my copies of the Marvel Masterworks reprints of the early issues of Jack Kirby's hit 1960s books. They're pretty different from most media kids consume today in any

The reason those don't happen, and that a good Captain Marvel series isn't likely to happen anytime soon, is because kids are not a big market for comic books nowadays. I agree that it's a chicken/egg problem in some ways, but even quality kids' ongoing series tend to sell poorly and get cancelled.

Numbers alone get a little muddy given the proliferation of self-styled critics in the age of the Internet, many of whom have little knowledge of film as a medium and rarely disagree with popular opinion.

These are the opinions of a personal fan of Batman and don't necessarily align with the opinions of the people who pay for tickets to movies.

Honestly, the world probably does need more types of superheroes than just Batman.

Perhaps we need more of some things, and less of others.

Yeah but that depends completely on making a good movie regardless of how "faithful" it is.