rickbagain
RickB
rickbagain

That's a third option, yeah, and another I support.

What do you mean by "a Daredevil/Jessica Jones" treatment? Do you mean low-stakes and character-oriented? Or do you mean dark, realistic and adults-only? Because I'll agree heartily with one and disagree with the other.

Unless makes Incident at Loch Ness's commentary track available, they're not putting up the real film. The commentary track is a continuation of the story of the film, as well as an escalation of its central conflicts. And it's very funny. (You get to hear Werner Herzog tell someone, "That [your wife left you] doesn't

The Joker wouldn't dare mess with Amanda Waller? It's about time the DC cinematic universe got something right.

There are a few pieces of culture that I encountered as an adolescent/teen that had outsized effects on my worldview and on the way I understand art: Sports Night, Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech, Fitzgerald's "Winter Dreams," and Dark City.

No, homecoming is a real thing in high school. It's a bigger deal in some schools than others, but it's definitely a thing.

I actually dig this title a lot: Beyond the blatant celebration of Marvel getting some degree of creative control over the way that their marquee character is presented on film, I like tying the character so explicitly to high school life. It promises something markedly different from what the Garfield years seemed to

Of course, Olde Fortran. The only logical answer.

Man alive, if Calendar Man was the lead antagonist, I'd be thrilled.

So, the same backstory as claimed by Thomas Wayne/Dr. Hurt/Peter Mayhew?

I have a friend who suggested that all superheroes' names should be the first initial and last name of their secret identities:

First is the Durst, second is the West, third is the one with the treasure chest.

This is a "serious" role. I can't understand why the reviewer is discussing this movie through a paradigm of comedy. It has jokes in it because life has jokes in it. See my other comment on this thread for my quick take on the flick.

I like Ebert's mantra that you should judge a movie by what it is aiming to do, not by what you wish it had done. Just came from a screening of this in DC, and have to say that I'm shocked to see the reviewer trying to compare this to 30 Rock, Anchorman or sketch comedy. The film *clearly* doesn't position itself in

I know one woman who has been making her own cosplay for a few years now both because she enjoys it and because she’s working costume-design and costume-production skills for work.

It might be worth mentioning that the app seems to only be available in India.

He was absolutely, unequivocally the perfect choice to voice Marvin.

Is this only playing at Film Forum in New York, or is it going to be showing in other cities?

This show is going to immediately become so much more interesting when they reveal that her DEO boss is really the Martian Manhunter.

The entire episode would probably be worth it for the way he spits out the phrase, "Stupid ape!" Thankfully, though, the rest of the episode is great, too.