shakesmcqueen--disqus
Shakes_McQueen
shakesmcqueen--disqus

I thought Star Trek Enterprise had it's moments, but it totally lost the plot in the final season especially, when the head of the Vulcan High Command became a scenery chewing Bond villain, T'Pol''s storylines got dumber and dumber, and all of that nonsense about Archer having the katra of Surak in him happened.

We are talking about the guy who has Sea Org members making $0.40 an hour tricking out his vehicles, airplane hangars, and house, right? And the guy who had Scientology hand-pick a girlfriend for him, then scream at her an inch from her face for having the gall to have a migraine and not pay appropriate respects to

-200 Points for invoking Godard and Truffaut in a conversation about Marvel's Ant-Man.

The terrible Evanescence songs are almost the only thing I remember about the Daredevil movie, because having songs like that with vocals, made the movie laughable - not dark or gritty. Especially when paired with that pathetically choreographed scene of Elektra stabbing the sandbag (while I think there was a

Adam Sandler is a hack, but much like Michael Bay these days - if you go see the movies anyway, then that's on you.

" In general, the Herman Cain impersonation seemed completely unnecessary and it seemed to lean on exaggerating mannerisms…"

Marvel Studios still only puts out 2 (occasionally three) films per year.

I enjoy the MCU films, but I do wish Marvel had enough faith in their characters to back off the third act, earth-rending action scenes in most of their movies. It was especially evident in Iron Man 3, that the film didn't really need that climactic end battle with a thousand Iron Man suits, for example.

They never stopped making those films.

Nothing gets past Baskin Robbins.

The way this movie ends is one of the funniest parts of the entire thing. I'd consider going to see it again, just to see those elongated Luis Pena flashback explanations again.

The way the movie ends was my biggest laugh, with Michael Pena recounting another tip he got, followed by "He said ''Yeah'"… and then awkward silence… credits.

Near exclusion? It wouldn't have made a ton of sense for her to show up before the Ant-Man movie, and *SPOILER*

Yes, but contained in a tiny package, hence the comments in the movie trailers of him having the potential energy of a bullet. He's not throwing guys across the continent in the trailers - he's just kicking their asses with about the strength of a human being, but it looks absurd coming from something so tiny. An

The idea that Ant-Man becomes exponentially stronger as he shrinks, and proportionally weaker if he gets big, actually is from the comics. And I believe the movie even tries to explain the "science" behind it.

My understanding of the Thor stuff, was that Whedon WANTED to put it in the film, but he wanted to put more of it in, and the studio wanted him to cut it down for time, so he'd rather have just cut it all instead. That's a little different than the idea that Whedon didn't want the scenes at all.

Funniest part in all of this, was the Fox News commentator and stuff saying things like "what's next? The AMERICAN FLAG?", as though the Confederate battle flag was as American as apple pie… and not, y'know, technically the traitorous flag of secessionists.

I thought the first Despicable Me was a pretty fun watch, and I even enjoyed some bits of the sequel… but fuck me am I tired of the minions, and the increasing focus on them.

Oh damn, you implied you slept with my mom! That makes me really angry!

I love how your DC fan frustration is right on the tip of your tongue like this. It wasn't a criticism - it was a question. I had no idea Batfleck was supposed to be in this film in any capacity.