They’re one of the last unionized workforces in America, packing up actors in shipping crates and sending them from movie to movie.
They’re one of the last unionized workforces in America, packing up actors in shipping crates and sending them from movie to movie.
Phoenix would have to put on a lot of old-age makeup to jump from 81 to Pattinson’s present-day.
Even if Pattinson has been gaining weight recently, Affleck has been doing so faster.
You make some good points, but I still listen to doom metal even though I could just listen to Black Sabbath.
Is orange/green a common form of color-blindness?
I blame him for Star Wars.
You’ve got to be a tough, manly man to watch this comic book movie. Nearly as tough as Lucrecia Martel, who directed a film titled “The Headless Woman”, and thus has balls of the hardiest steel.
Hugo Strange is the one person on that first list I don’t remember. It sounds more like a real name. Ra’s al Ghul would be in the same boat if it weren’t for Batman Begins.
To be fair, King of Comedy wasn’t that successful on its initial release, which is why this is the only spawn of KoC I’m aware of. And it’s not like there are existing examples of this being a commercially viable approach to comic book movies.
Wasn’t that what the recently departed “Gotham” was, since Bruce Wayne was too little to be Batman?
Most people aren’t critics, so critics are indeed unrepresentative.
Why is an assistant principle at a suburban highschool giving any sort of permission for a student to investigate a homicide? That’s not his responsibility.
I still like most of the reviews here, but I was thinking recently about some discrepancies people were highlighting between critics & audience scores of movies. Audiences are self-selecting and can be unrepresentative, but there are some astoundingly lopsided differences. It seems like the people who become critics…
Ignatiy can be quite funny. He does actually criticize films as films rather than just saying people are good or bad for liking or disliking it.
Yoda disappeared at the culmination of dying of old age, whereas Luke seemed basically fine up until the end. Kenobi turned off his lightsaber and permitted Vader to strike him down. But nobody killed Luke. Where else in the films is there a precedent for what happened to Luke?
You don’t have to be a “fan” of the police in order to rely on them when someone you know gets murdered. And these were suburbanites who were hardly in some area where most crimes go unsolved and people need to rely on the threat of gang retaliation to deter murder.
Dying on multiple hills would be quite an achievement.
Appearances can be misleading, as I am not.
Did he even “change things up” that much? As the link points out, the film begins with the rebels/resistance on the run from the empire/first order and at the end that’s still the case. Luke has died from no apparent cause, but he also wasn’t doing anything, so it doesn’t appear to make a difference. There’s no Han…