Well, if Schreier is the one breaking this news, it’s probably already been canceled.
Well, if Schreier is the one breaking this news, it’s probably already been canceled.
I don't know if a Joker sequel can really be made in this day and age. Seeing how crippling PC culture is to creativity.
That’s a thing that always bugged me about the Order 66 sequence in RoTS. We see shots of the Jedi Council being taken out like punks. I know we’re supposed to think that war has clouded the Jedi in general to The Force so they don’t see it coming, but you’re telling me Plo Koon, one of the Jedi who was said to be one…
Yeah, UC1 is one of the best examples of “this is fun, but I would love to see what they can do with two more years of development because it’s ALMOST there." And the answer was Uncharted 2, which is still pretty amazing.
Most likely it’s because Todd’s Joker sequel would be almost beat for beat the exact same plot as the first movie but it’d be set in Metropolis.
A 20-30 hour game is not worth $60, nor is the ‘souls’ style play attractive to me.
The parody elements aren’t up to usual woodrocket standards. Like, couldn’t they go for the more lyrical “Won’t you blow me, neighbor?”
Also, in this universe, Starr joined another band, leading to the famous quote, “Ringo isn’t even the best drummer in Garry Symes and the Funkadelic Pineapples.”
Goddammit, sometimes I get lulled into the belief that there’s a ceiling to how ridiculous Silver Age comics could be, and then bam - one of your posts opens the skylight.
The number of rooms in which he’s not is a very small one.
He’ll be the most famous person in the room until he croaks.
I mean I guess it depends on the room, but yeah he probably is.
Yeah, the ending was terrible. In Groundhog Day, at the end it’s clear that this crazy magical thing happened so that Bill Murray would learn to stop being so self-centered and understand other people’s feelings. In this movie, the crazy magical thing happened so Jack would learn that it’s always the man’s job to ask…
For someone who runs a multinational conglomerate by day and fights crime by night, Batman has a lot of time on his hands.
I know it was meant to be a one off gag in the movie but as someone who’s done a Masters in International Public Health, if I’d been offered a button to press that would have meant cigarettes never existed but the cost was erasing the Beatles’ music from existence, sorry guys but I’d have been mashing that button *so*…
I would liked it if in a mid-credits scene, it cut to Paul McCartney as a cofounder of Apple announcing the launch of the new iTunes music streaming service or something like that.
I was entertained for a good chunk of its runtime — mostly because Patel was engaging — but boy howdy did it fail to stick the landing. Or, rather, landings — cuz the final concert was exceedingly lame and the resolution to the love story turned a woman who’d felt like an actual person into a cardboard movie…
In universe Paul actually did die in a car accident in November of 1966. No one really cared except Mrs. Macca.
Glad he got a kick out of it, but the movie is a mess! Fun premise, poorly executed, with little of it ringing true. I did like the Oasis joke, even if it’s a little easy.
The Beatles never existed in the (post-whatever-the-fuck-happened) universe of Yesterday but as you noted yourself, Lennon definitely exists in the film’s world, so there’s no reason to assume McCartney doesn’t too, so that angle seems to be a weird hook to hang your article on.