Sorry, that wasn’t clear, I was talking about the budget for the show, not his individual pay.
Sorry, that wasn’t clear, I was talking about the budget for the show, not his individual pay.
Fuller was asking for so much money there was no way that the show made any economic sense, and when Starz gave it to him, he asked for even more the next season. Fuller’s ego, and the attempt to make a nice tight story into a seven season ongoing series, was what killed it. Waaaaay too much greed.
Which is what wrecked the show. If it had just been a two-season telling of the original story it would have been much better, but instead everyone got greedy.
Odds of Mark Ruffalo saying “It was like I was a different person back then” when referring to the events of The Incredible Hulk...100%
Often times a positive kickstarter is the main point of data used to get other investors, so they probably had other money. As for the 70 count, I’m sure they were counting outsourcing teams as a vast majority of that 70 (which they really should not).
I have to feel like there comes a point where a movie is so bad that it permanently damages you career as an actor to be in it. Casting directors watch this garbage looking for young talent. If you are directed this poorly and given lines this bad, it just comes off that you cannot act.
Oh, I see, like a dome farm that generates oxygen for an enclosed colony. Yes, I could see that working.
I think that will work great if you have a few hundred years.
Unless there was a mechanical issue with the car, she needs to AT LEAST go away for the rest of her life.
It was nice that an adult in the room cut the scene establishing the she was, in fact, alive. It made it a much better movie (not that it was great anyway).
Because killing Sophie was the only thing that firmly established Joker was an irredeemable bad guy that the audience should in no way be rooting for.
That’s too bad, because killing Sophie was one of the only interesting things the movie did.
Because our planet is the only one to have one precious and dangerous element:
Paramount didn’t make the decision about Top Gun 2, Tom Cruise did. Paramount is so on the ropes at this point, they are 100% Cruise’ bitch.
Missed it by one letter!
The smartest thing for Discovery/Warner to do right now if kill every DC film and tv property, let the IP recover for a decade, wait for the MCU to overstay it’s welcome, and then do a brand new coordinated launch with a powerful franchise owner.
To be fair, there is an enormous amount of dick waving going on in the Discovery take over of HBO Warner. Record amounts. Whole divisions of Warner are doing things on their own in random power grabs right now. Zaslav and the discovery management have to really slam some heads to get any kind of control.
They could have just done a live action version of the JL/JLU cartoon as 10 movies and made billions. The scripts and pre-vis were literally sitting on the table!
I never watched the show, but my kids and their friends did. Every single one of them stopped watching in disgust after season 2. I’d love to know how this show stayed around, I assume the numbers are just abysmal.
Also, I think a big part of the problem isn’t a relationship, it’s being smoochy all over the set while people are trying to work. I’m sure there are plenty of on set romances between the crew where they aren’t draped all over each other when they are suppose to be working (because they’d get their ass fired for that…