I love the supporting characters in Ant-Man. Judy Greer is criminally underused (as with all things Greerish, even Archer), but Cassie Lang is seriously awesome.
I love the supporting characters in Ant-Man. Judy Greer is criminally underused (as with all things Greerish, even Archer), but Cassie Lang is seriously awesome.
I’ve seen the trailer at least 4 or 5 times at this point (the Marcus I go to seems to show every single trailer for any Christian movie that exists) and good gravy did the movie itself look even worse than what you read it’s about.
I’m beginning to think “Instagram Influencer” may not be a solid career choice.
and your point is?
Might that not be because these faith-based movies have a habit of following the same formula? If one would put storytelling above pandering, it might get a different review.
Huffman is playing it fucking smart by owning up to her guilt and trying to get the smallest sentence possible.
“He left a God-sized hole in his pants” Love the Boys!
Oh, is this finally coming out so I don’t have to see the previews for it anymore?
This whole thing looks like a Hallmark Channel movie and I’m kinda amazed half the people in it agreed to do it.
Holy crap, what did Topher Grace ever do to deserve this?
Nat, “Shall we play a game? That’s from a movie-”
Chris Evans as Cap! The Best Chris!
I haven't interacted with MikeD before so I'm a bit stunned by just how dumb his comment was. Like really really dumb. In a snarky world where anything that happens has to be criticized no matter how absurd, after awhile it doesn't matter who comments.
There's always one...
I always giggle when Crossbones does the evil guy threat and Falcon just says "MAN SHUT THE HELL UP"
The Russos and the Cap writers have done such a great job with Nat, it feels like a whole different character from IM2 and the Avengers movies
The main protagonist and antagonist literally share one scene together in the second act, and they just talk. And it works. That’s how good this movie is.
Yeah, I don’t think Steve is really that different from when we first meet him. Indeed, I’d say that’s kind of the point, as laid out in his conversations with Dr. Erskine in The First Avenger, where Erskine tells him, in essence, don’t change, don’t compromise your own conscience no matter what happens or what you’re…
He never really believes in the powers that be. His first act as Captain America is to ignore orders and go rogue.
I disagreed with the article you guys wrote about Tony Stark having the greatest character progression back when it was written and I disagree with it now. Captain America has a much better progression that is consistent and built on well throughout each of his appearances. As I said last year about Steve: