What, joining the KKK?
What, joining the KKK?
Blankets is technically excellent but I found the story insufferably whiny.
I'm not one for "best of" awards, really, but Cash's performance is as good an answer as any—it's certainly my favorite of the year.
It would make sense that he'd accept oversight… until his friend shows up again, someone he promised he'd see through "to the end of the line", and then he's told that oversight means he has to sit back and watch someone shoot that guy.
Makes perfect sense to me. Tony Stark co-created Ultron so he feels responsible for what happened in Avengers 2. The government (or some villain's plot) tells Captain America he can't just do whatever he wants anymore. Then Captain America wants to help his friend, who's an international fugitive. He's told to knock…
In my opinion, reading these two characters as "not friends" suggests people just aren't aware of the way that certain friends act toward each other.
Well, it is, like, the toughest thing in the world, or whatever. You might as well beat on someone with it if they're wearing a tank for clothing, right?
They're all jerks to each other, and also friends. It's called Marvel.
Simon Pegg is, however, a huge whiner on the Internet, about anything and everything.
A goofy Lex Luthor suggests we might actually have an entertaining Batman and Superman movie on our hands, since such a movie is by definition humorous. I don't trust Snyder, but I hope there's a lot of jokes in it.
My guess is that the set-up in the movie will be the normal Suicide Squad deal, where if you're on the team and you die on a mission, a bomb goes off inside you to cover Waller's tracks. So the Joker will have to keep someone alive or risk dying himself, etc. and so on…
High-energy, snappy, sarcastic, jokey… this is the standard Lex Luthor from most stories about Lex Luthor…
It's not a great trailer.
That Guardians trailer was total garbage. Nothing is more cringe-inducing than having two comedians stand around and remind you that the movie in the trailer is a comedy, but without being the least bit funny.
It's a little boring when some grotesque villain straight up explains to their victim that they're going to "hurt" them, "bad". It sounds so mild and cartoony.
By sheer coincidence of when I started watching, Hal Sparks will always be Talk Soup for me.
Shouldn't this be "74% of Americans think video games may not be a waste of time"?
Why the hate for Steel? It's an okay concept. If they're going to make Superman movies forever they might as well.
It seems okay to make an exception for episodes about Homer attempting something dangerous involving long falls and rocks.
Maude, eh?