… who then spent 15 years in a Buddhist monastery, presumably learning detachment and acceptance in addition to kung-fu.
… who then spent 15 years in a Buddhist monastery, presumably learning detachment and acceptance in addition to kung-fu.
Even Colleen mentioning once or twice about how her landlord was on her case for rent would have been enough for this to be clueless-but-nice, instead of clueless-but-creepy.
I'm sad Neil Patrick Harris isn't playing the Music Meister.
I see that we're using "the people" rather loosely in the headline.
Not for nothing, but the idea of Batman, the World's Greatest Detective, actually solving a mystery in a movie sounds fucking fantastic.
Ehhhh, it's pretty explicable when you remember he is super-jacked and good looking, and is famous mostly for playing a male stripper and a werewolf who also was frequently naked.
Ah, a member of that 1812 crowd, eh?
Oh, well perfect. Watching four 22-minute episodes, out of context, is a far more reasonable way for me to properly understand a key character in a movie.
Yep, I didn't care for that sequence at all.
Especially since the whole movie revolves around the Death Star's initial director, who dies in the course of the film. It's not like Tarkin's appearance following Krennic's death is some massive plot hole that needs to be explained.
I suppose that depends on which actors you're talking about.
Nothing makes a movie more enjoyable than a homework assignment to watch several seasons of two related TV series in order for it to make sense!
Basically, I don't know why Danny isn't the equivalent of a live-action Aang from Avatar - a prodigy of martial arts chosen against his will for a war he doesn't really want to fight. He truly loves martial arts, Buddhism and all that, but (true to Buddhist form) is an utterly reluctant warrior, and yes, a bit of a…
I was wondering it there was some kind of plot hole, where they used Gao INSTEAD of Nobu and the Hand, and that maybe the producers of Iron Fist confused the two.
He left because he wanted to head in to Tosche Station and pick up some power converters.
The style of kung-fu he learned ought to be unique to the hidden city of K'un L'un, so I'm okay if it doesn't look "real" … as long as it also looks good. I'm only a few episodes in so far, so here's hoping.
The first clip of Daredevil, where the guy says "if he had a suit of armor or magic hammer, I'd understand how he keeps kicking your ass" was actually cute - it showed these people are well-established in the public consciousness.
Goddddddd I forgot how stupid "flag waver" is. It's Captain goddamn America. The man was in propaganda films in the '40s and then saved the world from aliens, all before getting his own detailed exhibit at the Smithsonian in D.C. This would be like if Dick Tracy turned out to be a real person, times a hundred.…
If I punch someone hard enough to break the brass knuckles they're wearing, aren't I also hitting them so hard that I'm shattering all of the bones in their hand and probably also breaking their arm?
He also knew how to take a clip out of a gun and unload the chambered round, as if he'd done it a thousand times. I suppose it's possible they might have some kind of firearm training in K'un L'un, but it seems a little unlikely.