doho1234
doho1234
doho1234

In the end, no one who is deciding to see an animated movie is going to go based on a (famous person’s) character’s voice. Especially something like this movie, where it’s mostly about taking your kids to the “movie going experience.” Probably the only time this really mattered that I can think of is Robin William’s

The last real triple AAA console title I played through all the way was one of the earlier Assassin Creed games ( aside from Breath of the Wild), and I was amazed at how many people were involved with making that game, across various studios. Each person commanding a salary and benefits of some amount. So even if take

Why can’t Cliff be on the list. Surely you can separate a fictional character from the actor who plays them.

Actually, I can’t help but think that most people probably have their Avenger knowledge from the tour of Rogers, The Musical.

I always assumed that Disney did the 1 or 2 episodes a week thing to spread out the show juuuuuuuuuuust enough to get an extra month of subscriptions of people who pay once and binge everything in a weekend.

Yeah, I don’t know how you expect employees ( at minimum wage, even) to hit “raising sales goals” when the entire physical game media industry is essentially dying away to be a small niche market.

I assume that there’s either:

Anyone who complains about “Unobtainium” in Avatar( even though that is an actual slang term ) should refuse to see any movie that has a large dinosaur namedGigantosaurus” in it based on principals alone.

Best Fight (Euphoria beat out the final fight from Spider-Man: No Way Home, a clear indication of what kind of crowd we’re dealing with here).

Don’t forget random junk dealers and heads off criminal organizations are immune.

I’ve never met one, but I did believe that there are people called Navy Seals.

One of the basic tenets of being a Jedi is that you always pay your tools and you never force-jump over subway ticket machines.

Yeah, I don’t quite get Darth Vader’s seemingly random they-work-now- but-not-now-in-this-case abilities to creating/putting fires and force grabbing people from large/small distances.

Well, except that is kind of the point. Whether he created them or not has very little bearing on how much input he CURRENTLY has on those shows, and while he is listed as an Executive Producer on those shows, it’s kind of a meaningless title and is handed out as a ‘thank you’ to help with the royalty checks but with

The historical meaning of Executive Producer is that that is the person who ultimately secured the funding for the show. That’s it. Not much even about content.

Aren’t most summer action blockbusters about Top [insert] though, and you could say that about most actors who have been around for a while.

It’s actually pretty amazing that James Bond still refuses to simply go to the number system after all these years, because you absolutely know there’s someone in marketing talking up that possibility.

My guess is that's it's a shorter amount of time than waiting to ensure your Bluetooth is connecting to your phone, and then scrolling your phone looking for that perfect playlist to start before driving.

Stop lights inconvenience me from preventing me from getting to places. Driving on the right side of the road inconveniences me when the road is blocked by traffic when the other half off the road is clear. Should I be able to ignore those, too? Or so we just accept the fact that in order to maintain a semblance of

Yep, pretty much. But the typical Marvel reviewer is mostly about “hot takes” on “why did character x do this or that” with very little understanding how the nuts and bolts of film production actually works.