tweeducation--disqus
Tweed
tweeducation--disqus

You accidentally watched "Manger Things" on Hallmark.

That's lame as far as comparisons go. The superhero genre was popular way before Twilight and Hunger Games, and it's still popular now.

a month, or a whole month?

I remember history differently. People didn't love Wall-E quite as much at first, and Ratatouille was a movie people found pretty ho-hum for the most part, despite how good it really is. And don't forget Pixar skipped a year before coming out with Cars in 2006. I just feel like since Up and Toy Story 3, Pixar gets

It's only been a year since Inside Out.

Wolf of Wall Street was where Robbie got everyone's attention. She's become a bigger deal lately because Focus was alright and the new Suicide Squad movie has her front and center for the marketing, which has literally been in full speed since last summer. Yeah, she's a star.

All true, and I guess you could say that most audiences don't criticize a movie for being "emotionally manipulative" either. At least I've never heard an average front row joe say that before.

Pixar gets shit on for this just as much. Read almost any review of Inside Out and Finding Dory, and the critic's "one problem" is that it feels emotionally manipulating, as opposed to the movies that are emotionally passive-aggressive or something.

People will opinion anything these days.

It's pretty obvious, but in a not-obvious way.

Yet he's also saying it's worse than Good Dinosaur (which got a Pixar B), and while I love that movie to death, I know for a fact that liking Good Dinosaur is a rare thing.

Toy Story 3 overrated? Tell that to Tasha Robinson.

The nun shows up in like the first five minutes.

I don't see it as an out, though, more as a way for people to recognize that Disney stories can, in fact, break tradition successfully. Plus, it's a Pixar movie, anyway, so it doesn't directly apply to Frozen having the snowballs to be more inclusive.

"For one thing, Elsa is the only Disney princess…without a potential love interest. (The official Disney princess lineup is…Merida.)"

Some think as much as 5 years has passed in the show, though I'm not convinced that gels at all with Little Sam, Jon's adventures, and other subplots. My best guess is a little over three years for some of these stories, and a little less than three years for others. I think we're fast forwarding through the Arya

That, and the guy is clearly a genius for coming up with and executing such a complicated plan within the span of one year. Frank Underwood would be jealous.

And he won, too.

That's so four score and seven years ago.

He has the genius level intellect, so the movie keeping him alive could lead to his development as Baron. I could easily see him teaming up with Red Skull if Weaving ever makes it out of that cosmic cube.