Show this article to your what?
Show this article to your what?
I think part of it is studio caution, since an entirely new series is a risk, whereas if you make a sequel to a successful film the people who liked the previous one will be likely to give it a shot.
Why does Sophie having an upcoming movie mean she has to behave differently from the rest of the cast? Maisie Williams has New Mutants coming up, and most of the rest (not Jack Gleason) are continuing to act.
The “Wild Cards” series includes “Jokers” who have useless powers. I haven’t actually read any of them, I just know George R. R. Martin edits them.
I’m not a fan of Looper and would be happy to dump on it via association with Kinberg, but he’s not a credited writer on that. You might be thinking of Jumper.
If even the saintly Charles Xavier can accidentally kill hundreds of people in an instant with his mind - including all of the other X-Men - due to the onset of some Alzheimer’s-like condition, then the human bigots were right all along. Mutants ARE just too damn dangerous, and need to be registered and controlled.
I suppose 3 years old would be a bit young for the social commentary in Ms. 45, The Devils or Little Sister but presumably she’ll move onto more mature films once she’s in kindergarten.
“In a World” was alright. I wonder if she’ll ever direct again.
That one’s just a remake of The Shop Around the Corner, so she could cover that instead.
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles did some things well, but they weirdly seem to have erased the arc Sarah herself went through in the first movie.
Kumagoro put together this list a couple years ago at the Pop Culture Disqus channel. Are you the same person?
None of that meme even appears in the movie!
This is an interesting case of text versus speech, because I don’t know whether you’re using “read” in the past tense to describe your own actions, or in the present tense as an imperative.
Marky Mark was already a cop, Joaquin Phoenix is the one who got deputized.
That reminds me of one of my favorite Perry Bible Fellowship comics:
Yul Brynner’s Black Hat gunslinger from Westworld couldn’t be bargained, reasoned with, made to feel anything or set to stop pursuing Richard Benjamin.
Speaking of X-Files, I liked “Rm9sbG93ZXJz”, their take on a Black Mirror episode in the eleventh/last season.
The kids goes to really extreme lengths, hence Jerome Flynn’s skepticism about the blackmail material being sufficient. The reveal at the end makes it fit better.
No, the protagonist definitely believes himself to be guilty and is too ashamed to be willing to ask his family or the authorities for help.
Vulture just released their own ranked list, which also includes the latest season. I agree with theirs more: