The Walking Dead does 16 episodes a season, which is not far off of a full large season. And the production is significantly more involved than your average CBS procedural.
The Walking Dead does 16 episodes a season, which is not far off of a full large season. And the production is significantly more involved than your average CBS procedural.
Nolan hasn't really shaken a camera since Batman Begins (besides a couple of bits in Inception.) It's kind of hard to whip around an IMAX camera.
Clint Eastwood really wants you to know what PTSD is like.
Absolutely pointless, unless you really want the best sound possible. In fact, it's probably pointless to go to an IMAX ever again, since Interstellar will be the last film shot in the 70mm IMAX format (if my local IMAX is telling the truth.) It's sad that they are willing to devalue their brand so much. Interstellar…
1. The Navy never confirmed Kyle's claimed kill count.
There's always Adam Sandler. Only as long as you let his 50 friends and hangers on present the awards, of course.
You forgot White Christmas. It has Jon Hamm as a charming douche!
The only thing left to speculation was whether the new Jackman died each time, or the old one, or is there any difference? The cloning absolutely worked.
It has the best shootout of any movie ever made. It is the Bullitt car chase of shootouts.
Goyer is the one you should be worried about. Snyder would be fine if he had some decent writing backing up his pretty pictures.
Except it's not a good change. It's the homogenization of yet another fps. It's sad when people have such low standards that they think that imitating the most popular and most imitated series ever is "doing something new."
I believe Craig has said that he has wanted to leave since 2011.
He owns the best theater by far in Seattle, so I can't hate him.
I think he was a straight up sociopath. He fits the definition to a T: "a person with a psychopathic personality whose behavior is antisocial, often criminal, and who lacks a sense of moral responsibility or social conscience."
I can't think of someone who was NOT awesome in the film.
IIRC, James Newton Howard was told to score it like an inspirational "coming up in the world" movie.
You would have to ignore half of Nolan's filmography and all of Bay's racism, sexism, and general contempt for humanity to make that comparison on just a superficial level.
Well, humorless usually means "without humor." But, anyway, what, exactly, is your definition of fun? The term is too nebulous to know how Nolan failed at it. I mean, Insomnia is probably the only film of his that I can conclusively say is in no way "fun." Even Memento, probably his most dour film, still has a sense…
He was the best part of the first season. I hope this Paxton resurgence continues.
They did give an explanation. IIRC, that planet was giving the thumbs up for the longest amount of time, so it was the likeliest to be hospitable to humans. Matt Damon's was the only other planet still broadcasting, but it was also the furthest, and started giving the thumbs up later.