They have jetpacks. The future always has jetpacks.
They have jetpacks. The future always has jetpacks.
Speaking of changes: are we ever going to get community grades back? It’s pretty shitty that not only do we not get to participate in scoring things as a community anymore, but the past aggregations have been wiped from history.
Yep. Jake can be a goof, but he’s a really good detective. Need to rewatch the scene where Holt is teaching them poker to spot the contractions.
Apologies for my absence and change of name.
This was a small moment but I loved the touch of Rosa rolling behind Charles and Amy talking. It was small but it cracked me up.
He got some of the humor in the character in the first Avengers film by contrasting him with the rest of the team. In Age of Ultron everyone had the same witty banter style that was identical, often misplaced, and jarring.
I love the Old Grey Whistle Test; you can find a lot of clips on You Tube. Sometimes I’ll have a bottle of wine and go down a rabbit hole on YT watching that, Midnight Special, Soul Train, etc. for hours.
David Byrne and the Atomic Bomb band on Fallon playing Fantastic Man. Such a good, weird song, and the closet thing you’ll get to a Stop Making Sense sequel
Kanye West premiering “Black Skinhead” live on SNL is a moment I’ll never forget. A performance practically shaking with aggression.
These stopped and made me take notice:
Janelle Monae doing Dance Apocalyptic on SNL
Neil Young, absolutely revitalizing himself when he appeared on SNL promoting his album, “Freedom,” in 1989. This is not the Neil Young we had sadly grown used to seeing over the previous several years. I was calling people on the phone during this, shouting at them to turn on SNL!
About halfway through REM performing “Everybody Hurts” at the 1993 MTV Video Music Awards they decide to shift gears into an upbeat, faster version of their song “Drive”. To this day I’m still disappointed that the album version of “Drive” doesn’t rock nearly as much as this live version.
I thought the film was a solid A- probably one of the first of the MCU that I wouldn’t mind seeing a second time very soon after first viewing. My only slight niggle is that while the banter style of dialog worked for everyone else, it didn’t sit well with Hela’s character. Other than that, it was pretty great.
The best part of Evans’ performance, though, is that Cap isn’t naive.
This easily has to be the most Kiwis on screen in a sci-fi movie since Revenge of the Sith and its millions of Temuera Morrisons.
I’d agree, though I also think they’ve done a good job of making Cap an interesting character too. He SHOULD be a bore, but I’ve enjoyed Evans in the role and the character’s almost naive commitment to a belief in pure good and evil. Feel true to a comic book character.
“Blanchett, like Waititi, could certainly be doing something better with her time and talent”
I mean, don’t they usually? What’s wrong with having a bit of fun outside of your usual wheelhouse and entertaining people at the same time?
It’s worth it. One of the funnier films I’ve seen in ages. And featuring an unusually high amount of kiwi/Aussie accents which is good fun. Makes me feel like I’m at work.
I saw this over the weekend. God it was good. The cinema was laughing the whole way through. Hemsworth hit all the right notes, Goldblum was gloriously silly and fun and it worked brilliantly.