The intro can do the shadowy profiles with only eyes or other relevant details (S, lightning bolt, etc) visible and then the end credits can start with shots of everyone—including Batman—smiling unnaturally, Con Air-style.
The intro can do the shadowy profiles with only eyes or other relevant details (S, lightning bolt, etc) visible and then the end credits can start with shots of everyone—including Batman—smiling unnaturally, Con Air-style.
I don't know what to think about this film anymore. And I haven't even seen it!
When they perfect the the permed mullet, that's when they conclude that we have nothing more to teach them.
Using Science Diet pet food in a human menu seemed clever, but didn't go over well with the humans.
Well, if two sports teams are competitive, is it not a rivalry if one of them was founded a decade earlier and has more total wins?
I do, yes.
But what of Pam, Dwight?
Not on it's own, but I like WW better than anything Marvel Studios has produced in a few years.
It's as if Mads Mikkelsen had been cast as Reed Richards in that recent FF film.
To everyone making the point about no real rilvarly, I would say that right now, at this frozen instant in time, WB has just released their best film, whilst in my opinion Marvel Studios has been stagnating (or at least plateauing) just a bit.
I love Black Widow, but Winter Soldier is arguably the best thing that Marvel has made, and a lot of that was the small-ensemble feel. The character dynamics feel just-right to me.
I haven't heard anyone heaping that sort of praise on WB for being progressive.
I sigh everytime me I see the current sets.
Wow, once Thor: Ragnarok arrives in November we're going to have a new MCU film every two or three months through next July, from the looks of it.
In the future, our cyborg overlords will herd us from the silicon mines back to our nutrient pods using staffs that play Kenny G from built-in speakers.
Especially tragic since Kenny F was the only one who knew what the frequency is.
Ah, Quakers! They're so thoughtful.
I will say this—the early part of BSG was good enough that I believed that there was a plan. At its best, the show was of such high quality that it could say whatever it wanted without seeming to be making empty promises. Of course, in the long run the empty promises took the upper hand.
You may not have had the toast that I've had.
It had better production quality and more emotionally-real-seeming character stuff than almost any other science fiction show of its era.