First Class had a ton of potential because Matthew Vaughn directed it.
First Class had a ton of potential because Matthew Vaughn directed it.
He plays a Stormtrooper who gets caught having sex and then dies in a random mishap when two Tie Fighters accidentally collide at low speed.
Every year that passes, I think it’s clear that McQuarrie deserves an increasing amount of the credit for Usual Suspects.
I really hope he isn’t cast as Lestat. 1) Too old. 2) Utterly distasteful.
He lost me at dead rats and used condoms being sent to his castmates. That’s just flat-out disrespectful, not to mention unprofessional.
Jared Leto offers a little more on his method approach to the role, saying he tried out his Joker laughs on unsuspecting members of the public
He’d be signing hoping for the best and trying to make it work because that’s what Captain American does best.
thats why i loved Black Widow’s line to Tony about “His Goddamned Ego”
It goes back to what was quoted from Agent Carter in her eulogy, and WWII in general—ignoring your own moral compass to go along with the a consensus has always been wrong to Cap. The Sokovia Accords, as described in the movie, wouldn’t just be oversight, it would put the Avengers intervention in the hands of others.…
Also it must be said. Hearing the voice of a teen Spidey fighting adults and seeing him get hit. That make me cridge (In a fully involved with the movie world way)
He’s flat out saying no moral authority is superior to his own which is beyond arrogant.
this movie makes him not just wrong in his position but completely and utterly unreasonable. He’s flat out saying no moral authority is superior to his own which is beyond arrogant.
I disagree that Steve is actually any different from when he began- He still wants to do what he things is right, and he still takes full responsibility for the choices he makes and their repercussions.
That’s not a betrayal. That’s what he would have signed on for. That’s what signing meant. That is the whole point of signing on—to allow the UN to decide when and where to go and what to do there. You can’t sign on to that and then say never mind 12 hours later.
He could have simply been the reasonable Cap he’s always been (outside of the horrific Civil War) and signed up. Then the bomb happens with Bucky implicated. Cap is ready to go after him, but the UN tells him to stand down. They’ll handle it because there’s no intention on bringing him in alive. This doesn’t sit well…
I sided with Cap because, even though both sides had points, Cap’s team seemed to have more honest motivations. They believed in what they were fighting for. Iron Man was blame-sharing. Black Panther was out for revenge. Spider-Man wanted to impress Stark. War Machine was following orders. Widow was taking the path of…
It’s funny, because everyone here in the comments who’s siding with Iron Man is completely ignoring that bit of Cap’s dialogue from the movie and part of me is wondering if maybe they showed two slightly different movies to different audiences.
I thought they did an excellent job of making both perspectives sympathetic (which is apparently an unpopular opinion around these parts). The conversation they have at the Avengers HQ summed up the options perfectly. Stark is saying: “Hey, let’s be accountable to something so we have legitimacy,” whereas Cap is…
Meh, the movie was about the Sokovia Accords only tangentially. It should have been called "Iron Man: Guys, This is Really All About My Personal Issues." The movie began and ended with him.
I sided with Captain America. He did not want himself or the team to be a weapon that is deployed only when it aligns with someone else’s political agenda.