I just learned that M-11's original name was the Human Robot.
I just learned that M-11's original name was the Human Robot.
Maybe someone had secretly swapped all of Renner's milk with malk and it was the mere tension of the bowstring that did it.
He also sprained his neck filming the first Avengers, resulting in this statement from Joss Whedon, which is far from the most quotable thing he's ever said, but which I still get a kick out of:
"The city is flying. There's an army of robots running around. And I have a bow and arrow. None of this makes sense."
It totally nails what makes a Spider-Man conflict a Spider-Man conflict, and not just a 'superhero' one.
I will keep repeating this until it gains traction, but I'm convinced that the Netflix shows are their own universe, Earth-199910, where everything is identical to the MCU, until it isn't.
It definitely feels like a mouthful, and yet in practice it's the same number of syllables as "Threepio," which doesn't. I guess because going from Bee to Eight requires at least a fractional pause in a way that going from Pee to Oh doesn't? Like, if his name was BB-0, it would be fine.
Sometimes we even say the big one. The mother of all dirty words.
No thank you.
Baby Boss! No, The Boss Baby!
Right. That's what I mean as well. Your first time through watching his past movies, you can't possibly predict that the 'fascist/hag' exchange will recur, or Ed's apology for farting, or that the pub names will have significance.
Obviously I do have to see it again before I can say anything for sure, but I don't know that I can think of anything particularly notable in that vein, or at least anything that didn't ring a bell for me the first time I heard it.
I can say with a fair amount of confidence that it's the only one of Wright's movies that won't improve upon a rewatch.
Yeah, but then the studio's gonna ask him to put in a scene where Baby fights the Falcon and he'll quit.
Those are 100% not Wright's work. Luis' entire character is based on someone Michael Pena knows and those montages didn't exist until the McKay/Rudd drafts.
I feel like those two directives are at odds with one another, if for no reason other than his Secret Service detail.
But what 'right' did she actually do? Kill a man who was running away? The Doctor wouldn't condone that.
Yeah, I'll admit that was my thought too, at least re: Missy/The Master.
I mean, yes to all of that.
I don't see this happening in any way, shape, or form, but it's crazy and I love it.