If they cared about what the fans want, they wouldnt have done this show in the first place. Most anime fans do not want live action adaptations. And with how much they’ve already changed, it’s not as if they can claim to be true to the show.
If they cared about what the fans want, they wouldnt have done this show in the first place. Most anime fans do not want live action adaptations. And with how much they’ve already changed, it’s not as if they can claim to be true to the show.
I’m guessing that you have never actually talked to an anime fan, because you couldn’t have been more hilariously wrong if you tried. Anime fans don’t want live action remakes of anything, let alone the stone-cold classics that would be nearly impossible to improve. And because there’s nothing live action can do that…
That’s literally a direct quote of the book, LMAO!
Did Melissa Villaseñor turn white when I wasn't looking?
Kal-el, no.
That conclusion makes zero sense. You could really stretch and call them A military, but they are not THE military. People have problems with specific actions of specific organizations. Very, very few people think their country should have no military or method of self-defense whatsoever. Also, you would have to twist…
Last time I checked, Pixar is more than capable of making original movies.
“While the answers to problems aren’t military, the answer still is “develop a bigger weapon than the other guy.””
That doesn’t answer anything. It doesn’t say what assistance the military provided, or what, if anything they asked for in return. It includes movies like Karate Kid 2 and Silence of the Lambs, which don’t have any military themes, as far as I’m aware. “Assistance” could be something as small as providing guidance on…
“Don’t forget, part of the issue there is that 50% of that movie is trying to say “the military is correct in locking people up”
What? The way they describe it is literally the opposite of that.
Well, it’s had to develop an ensemble when half the movie is action scenes. (Technically, you can develop characters with action, but that requires a lot more creativity.)
Taika Waititi already mostly fit into the Marvel mould. Other than infusing it with some Kiwi pride, the movie was another example of the Marvel formula, albeit a very good example. James Gunn is the same. His “loveable asshole” schtick fits right in a whole cinematic universe full of loveable assholes, as long as he…
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Most of these shows use Toon Boom Harmony, which does have the ability to do frame-by-frame animation, along with the rigged puppets that most of these shows use.
That would have taken way too much legwork in a movie that was already pushing it in terms of runtime.
She was added last minute and they obviously couldn’t rewrite the entire script to include her in more. Also, cameos are not “a terrible example of screenwriting craft,” and she was CIA, so it wouldn’t make sense to make her a main character.
There’s nothing really to catch up on. I started with Goldeneye and skipped around a bunch and it was no problem. I still haven’t seen half of the movies. For No Time To Die, you might need to see just the Craig entries, but, even then, you could probably skip Quantum of Solace and read a plot summary of Spectre.
Ah, yes, because literal samurai armor complete with mall ninja sword is so much more dignified.
I know that nobody here knows how game development works, but the people making realistic sweat are not the same people writing the story.