I mean I hope it suck a little right? Wink Wink, nudge nudge
I mean I hope it suck a little right? Wink Wink, nudge nudge
I think a lot of people have already forgotten that the MCU didn’t really start on sure footing and definitely changed with the direction of the wind. The Hulk fell sort of flat so they followed the success of Iron Man, the sequel to which was a bit of a dud. Then you had the magic of Joss Whedon TM, which lasted all…
Oh calm down. It’s fiction. People respond to different things, and most would agree with OP.
I don’t know what he was like in the 90s, but I do think a lot of actors who have a big role and then spend years struggling to get work again afterwards are particularly susceptible to this kind of shit. Because when you mentally have to accept one of the following: (a) you’re not a very good actor, you lucked into…
I disagree. There’s a power disparity at play, and I’ve also been conditioned by decades of media to just roll with human death as a stake-building measure than pets/animals.
There’s also the fact that human beings are just fucking vile creatures to other living beings, despite the fact that we’re one of the few…
This movie seems committed to being demented, and I admire it for that. You kinda have to break taboos if you’re going to make the audience feel truly unsafe. It’s the kind of movie where if you’re worried about it crossing that line, you definitely shouldn’t see it.
Tonally the movie was all over the damn place. So I’m not surprised that a movie goes from “Jane has terminal cancer” to “Thor finds his sole surviving childhood friend half-alive and mutilated, then makes a joke about her missing arm” also included a scene where Gorr carves off his own tattoos.
I get that some folks wanted Gorr to be more hardcore (GORR, WIELDER OF THE NIGHTBLADE, RAAAAWR), but this is a movie that ends with Thor magically empowering a bunch of cute kids to fight monsters by, among other things, firing laser beams out of their stuffed animals.
It was never going to be rated R, Christian.
He also literally made multiple mistakes that “the top chess player in the world” shouldn’t make, which directly led to him losing the game, so...
This whole article seems an overly desperate stretch over and around the weird hollowness of the first Avatar movie and its lack of resonance in pop culture despite its box office success. Titanic gets referenced far more in pop culture than Avatar, and it came out 25 years ago. Toys and other Avatar merchandise…
You, know, to be honest unami is correct. The savings difference is minuscule in the short run and many will NOT notice a difference on their monthly bill. And the price IS high enough for many to put them off from the initial purchase. And this is coming from someone like myself who has replaced the many halogen can…
Interesting right up to the point it turns out to be limited to jumping through hoops on social media.
what im getting from this is that in order to see more behind the scenes footage of game development and a better understanding on how triple a games are produced, we need to generate takes so nightmarishly bad that developers will have no choice but to dunk on them
Patronage is just a fancy word for making corruption legal.
You’re thinking of “Jay & Silent Bob Reboot.” I saw it in Tucson with a live Q&A afterwards with Smith and Jason Mewes. I’m glad I went, enjoyed seeing the film with a raucous crowd, but have had zero desire to ever watch it again. Jason Mewes’ comeback from the hell of drug addiction has been inspiring, but his Jay…
As someone who's ambivalent about Smith (usually like his movies, but don't actively seek to watch them), and had his wife die suddenly and unexpectedly this year, it's a hard pass. I can't imagine a comedy with that as background.
Then fucking DOUBLE WHOAAAAAA!
If there’s anything I know by now, it’s that people are totally capable of understanding they’re watching fiction and still develop an understanding of reality based on that fiction.
but Dante’s been dealt an unlucky hand, failing to heal his anguish over the sudden, accidental deaths of his wife Becky (Rosario Dawson) and young daughter.