Sit, stand, kneel, downward-facing dog, or criss-cross applesauce, I don’t give a shit; it’s your First Amendment right to do any of them.
Sit, stand, kneel, downward-facing dog, or criss-cross applesauce, I don’t give a shit; it’s your First Amendment right to do any of them.
Since she lost her arms, Yo-Yo’s been either in shock, unconscious, or drugged; once she’s none of those, she’ll tell them.
As soon as he was diagnosed with dyslexia, Theo should have lawyered up and sued Cliff for the years of emotional abuse he endured because of academic failings that were largely due to a learning disability.
No one is watching just for Coulson. They are watching for the ensemble.
Coulson wouldn’t have believed a single word out of Ward’s mouth. Ward will always be a traitor to Coulson and the point was to bring in a character who could plausibly make Coulson question everything that’s happened. Though he’s not been seen since what, season 2? Mike Peterson has been an ally and a friend. So…
Evil Jemma is everyone’s greatest fear.
That’s an interesting thought. I was thinking sort of the opposite—Disney needed another season so that Coulson dies (again) before Infinity War. Then it would be less incongruous if someone mentions Coulson being dead—it would make sense to the people who only watch the movies, and would make sense to people watching…
Coulson and Mike had a lot of history - from Coulson getting Mike detained to Mike getting Phil abducted. It was both friends and enemies and sllies and I think Coulson was more likely to believe someone wearing Mike’s face than Ward’s. And Peterson was around from episode one. I thought that was a nice circle.
Such a silly sentiment, thinking Agents of SHIELD as a show can’t survive without Coulson. Coulson should have died LAST season, and have Daisy take over.
There are plenty of people who rub me the wrong way who will probably never be revealed to be serial rapists. I guess it’s a real thing but also seems meaningless.
Because he gets results, you stupid chief!
There’s only TWO montages, and they are DELIBERATELY set in opposition to each other within the mirrored structure of the screenplay!
The montagey-ness of it really disappointed me when I first watched it. I wanted more Cap in WII battles.
I was around 10 when it came out, and I was totally on board just because the helmet looked cool. Then I saw it and was totally obsessed for months. My mom even hand-painted a Rocketeer t-shirt for me because I guess Disney really dropped the ball on the merch side of things too. I haven’t seen it in a long time, but…
I don’t trust any straight man who watches this movie and doesn’t come out of it madly in love with her.
It’s a really good movie on its own, yeah, but I think you’re right in that it feels a bit too obligatory. It doesn’t help that it got overshadowed by its excellent sequels. I would never have predicted that the Cap movies would turn out to have been by far the most solid and consistent of the sub-franchises in the…
I think Johnston’s Captain America is kind of a forgotten part of the MCU: it definitely relies a bit too much on montages, and it feels a little obligatory - we have to get Rogers in the ice to set up The Avengers, etc.
I don’t know how I missed seeing this movie in 1991, as it was right up my alley. Hell I even remember the ad campaign in all of my comic books. Maybe Mr. Breihan is right in that I didn’ give a damn. My false memories say I thought it looked interesting, but the fact is I skipped it in he theater and never bothered o…
If anything, “ridiculously beautiful” somehow sells Connelly short in The Rocketeer.
One of the reasons why I love Captain America The First Avenger is due to The Rocketeer.