To quote a great movie: Amazing. Every word of what you just said was wrong.
To quote a great movie: Amazing. Every word of what you just said was wrong.
Imagine what might happen if Michael Bay was riding a bike without a helmet and was hit by a car and to treat the head wound, his doctor just fed him about six pounds of cocaine and then he went straight over to the editing bay. Kind of like that.
I thought the third movie was better than the second, and I really enjoyed the second film.
I guess everyone here hates it, but I loved John Wick 3. I think it’s the best one. There was a tinge of disappointment toward the end when I realized it wasn’t ending here. Hopefully they wrap it up with one more.
The plan—after they realized there was going to be more than one—was a trilogy. They opted not to do…
What was the word of mouth about 3? That it was awesome? Because I’d say, that given what the John Wick movies are supposed to be--vehicles for insanely awesome action--3 is the best one.
these movies work for a number of reason:
It’s the damnedest thing, every time he tries the movie reviews Ignatiy.
Finally someone points out that the real treat of the John Wick movies is the action.
The thing about the John Wick films is that they’re basically the action version of classic musicals like Singin’ in the Rain or an American in Paris - there’s a plot and there’s dialog, and they’re good and even great at times, but really they’re just an excuse to string together a series of thrilling kinetic…
Having seen 6 Underground over the weekend, I feel pretty solid in saying that it won’t end up on any great action movie lists. It’s stunningly terrible.
Right. Im remembering now he told Angela that it was important for her to see him standing on the pool. So yes, i suppose he needed to be captured so that x, y, and z can happen.
I think he intentionally gets hit by the beam, not because it wasn't avoidable, but because it was necessary. Why? We just don't know yet.
Veidt may be all flashbacks to when he was on Europa. He was then gilded and brought to Earth by Lady Trieu when her satellite spotted the message in dead clones. Or something like that.
I definitely like how Lindelof is even undercutting Alan Moore’s ideas and what the Minutemen were doing back in their time. Pretending to be heroes while a real problem was going on. On point for something called Watchmen.
That had to be one of the most incredibly directed and edited hours of television in recent memory. Stephen Williams can take a bow. The craftsmanship that was constantly on display, most especially in the first 30 minutes had me riveted. The partial sets, the split focus, the jump shots, the framing it was…
Veidt is on one of Jupiter’s moons, not Mars’.
Veidt isn’t orbiting Mars. He’s on one of the moons of Jupiter, probably Io, Europa, or Callisto.
I kind of think Triue is the one keeping him prisoner. That’s why his statue looks so old. It IS Veidt. Sort of that Han Solo bronzing? I think he’s a prisoner in his own mind....
The fleshing out of Veidt’s world has to be the most compelling and disturbing fun I have had in some time with any series. My mind scans the props full of turn of the century antiques and cobbled together steampunk apparatus. Harvesting fetuses (notice none were blue....) out of lobster traps and putting them in a…