robgrizzly
RobGrizzly
robgrizzly

Yea it really was. He should have been.

Combat was never what I cared about in a TR game, so that might be why I didn’t mind those mechanics too much. I really don’t even know why they’re here besides ‘because Uncharted.’ I was just glad there was less of it in Shadow, with more of an emphasis on explorations and puzzles. The Challenge Tombs here are easily

I honestly love this, lol

I’m confused if the author is actually seen Batman Begins. “Where is all your money in helping the city?” is practically all Rachel is asking of Bruce, and the movie makes a point of saying that’s what his parents were all about. It’s shaming him for not continuing their legacy.

I don’t know that the new movie interrogates these wealth ideas better than the Nolan trilogy, which is where I disagree with the article. They may not be perfect, but they are far more pronounced in Begins and Rises than they are in The Batman, which only has a fleeting line or two about the matter. In Nolan’s movies

I don’t see how this can go wrong at all

Some directors have some great takes on what they want to do with the material. But usually that comes after a baseline understanding of what that material is, which is what makes a fresh take intriguing in the first place. Eternals felt like a reboot to an IP that never got that first chance to be established, so a

I hope someone can write a Superman script while listening to Pearl Jam. Just to see where things go

Gotta save something for the sequel. Think of the first movie as still being in “Bleach” mode. (But seriously, it’s more literal than you might expect. They could have called him Bruce Cobain and it would be accurate)

I can see it. There’s something Kirk-y about him that syncs up with the Chris Pine version, anyway. But a young Shatner, I don’t know can ever be found. He’s one of a kind

I fully agree that for this kind of math, Marvel should show their work, and not let the audience do it for them. The MCU can take advantage of (take for granted?) built-in knowledge, that they didn’t actually earn, and it can lead to laziness for the sake of getting things where they want them to be.

I know we’re not supposed to say anything nice about the Avengers game, but I actually really liked the way they did her in that, strechy powers and all.

This will hit me hard. I started watching regularly around ‘94(?) and Ramon vs the 1-2-3 Kid is the first match I remember. I loved everything about him, from his finisher down to his colorful razor-blade tights. And the point about him helping define the anit-hero is an underrated big deal, because characters were

Hell yea, the toothpick, the side strut, his vocal style- Scott Hall created a character that was very fun to imitate. Loved his Razor Ramon entrance music too

“Hilarious” is a bit strong.

Now playing

I have faith he’ll do a really good job, actually. When I see him in interviews or hear him talk about his process, he even sounds a bit like a director.

they spend their entire day hating people. They can all suck my dick as far as I’m concerned.

My point is the hypocrisy about WB seemingly being particular about race in one instance, but not in others. Bane is from Latin America, but they cast a white guy. (Something can be said about Ra’s Al Ghul as well.) I just don’t see what leg they have to stand on in rejecting Zoe the way she says they did.

Meh. I think it makes less sense because playing both personalities the same makes it more obvious that people can guess Bruce Wayne is Batman

Sticking with the Nolan movies, I never liked Eric Roberts for Sal Maroni. Tom Wilkensen was great as Carmine Falcone, but that still bothered me too. These guys should be Italians! So where does the casting get off on Kravitz, when they can’t even get something as easy as this right?