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It was off-camera because the creators wanted to spare viewers the sight of such a wonderfully smug character dying.

The little dance moves from him were awful. I remember reading an interview in which he talked about his character being a knife expert. You do see him brandish a blade in the actual movie and…that's it.

I've been more impressed by a few DTV movies with guys like Michael Jai White and Scott Adkins than a lot of the big studios' output in recent years, although those guys are obviously still working in a different arena than the likes of McTiernan and Cameron.

He's the only good thing about the movie. He gives what's easily the best, most charismatic performance in it and he's such a great action star that he often overcomes the crappy filmmaking. And he's over 50 years old!?

Whoa, spoilers you fargin icehole! I had absolutely no idea Negan was going to die like all the other big bad villains.

While I think Yuen's acting dramatically improved over the course of the series, his character went from being one of my early favorites to just another dull Walking Dead character. I get that he experienced heavy stuff that changed him, but the show's handling of this was too clumsy, so instead it mostly felt like

Yeah, that kind of storytelling consistency certainly would be nice.

Yes, because it helped produce a show that wasn't boring like this American version. There was still impressive athleticism, like the fisherman who I believe actually won a couple times. It was just mixed in with people like the old sushi chef who wiped out on the first stage every time.

I was also sad to see Lin die. Yeah, he's a violent criminal, but as this show got worse, I found myself actually rooting for characters like Lin and Marks, who came across as far more charismatic, compelling and professional than the Sons; Jax and his crew just seem to back-stab everyone around them and stumble into

"Unser rocks"

Has anyone read the ballot choices from anonymous Oscar voters published by the Hollywood Reporter? Some of the reasoning provided, as well as the ignorance and disdain shown towards nominations in the animated, foreign and documentary categories, doesn't make the Oscars look much more legitimate than the MTV Movie

I think Ignatiy underrated this. If "47 Ronin" gets a B and both "Non-Stop" and "Riddick" get B+'s, then this deserves a super A++ or something. It's a nice comeback from Chow after "CJ7."