kirivinokurjr
kirivinokurjr
kirivinokurjr

So, is this part of the Spider-verse?

I really loved the first one, but the John Woo one that came right after should be avoided at all cost.  It’s really horrible.

I’m just not sure how else I can get the vial of my blood into your hands.

I didn’t like Sabrina, but I also love Ford in comedies, and Working Girl in particular ranks somewhere in my Top 5.

I’d put in either The Florida Project or Red Rocket for Florida, because those are really great movies and legit Florida.

I’m more upset that this doesn’t bode well for a series on Eugene’s origin story.

You tried your best and you failed miserably.  The lesson is: never try.

She’s so new to the biz that it’s understandable that people misspell Sofia Coppola.

I like to imagine Brooke Shields watching the stunt from her folder chair and with a bag of popcorn, just in case something goes wrong.

Amber Midthunder!

Things are definitely worse now judging by the headline’s use of “different than” instead of “different from”!

Man of Steel? More like Man, That Sucked!, AMIRITE?

I hadn’t thought of taking the documentary route.  Every one of his books has been recommended by someone, but this actually sounds like a good start.  Thanks.  I shall explore.

Since you mentioned him, what’s your recommendation for a Zizek gateway? I want to read his stuff, but I’m not gonna kid myself and think that I’ll grasp a book that assumes I already have a Ph.D. in American Studies.  I need to start with his commercial hit.

Brian Cox, obviously.

Between the Hulk-Dogs and those Ice Wolves from The Day After Tomorrow, the early 2000s might have been the pinnacle for Random Canine Baddie representation in film.

Sadly, I think what you’re saying makes a ton of sense, but that’s if the intent was to start a franchise. Maybe I’m being naive about this, but I don’t really remember if the intent was for Hulk to be followed by a sequel. If it were meant to be a stand-alone, one-time thing, then that might explain why Lee didn’t

I try to forget that Episode 9 exists.

“In the end we should judge movies on the final product and not people’s intentions or artistic goals when making it.”

It’s a shame that Ang Lee didn’t execute the filmmaking well because I’m intrigued by the direction he was taking. Banner/Hulk dealing with his demons sounded really interesting back then before Nolan’s Batman trilogy kicked off the rise of the emo superhero, and sounds interesting now in stark contrast to the MCU