Until they fuse his mouth shut. :/If he could just get Fox to greenlight his Deadpool movie, I think he'd be okay. The guy CLEARLY knows exactly what makes the character work.
Until they fuse his mouth shut. :/If he could just get Fox to greenlight his Deadpool movie, I think he'd be okay. The guy CLEARLY knows exactly what makes the character work.
Yeah, this was done poorly. As I said, it feels like someone hijacked what could have a really interesting take on a fairy tale and took the teeth out by forcing in things like what you mentioned.I was really interested in that movie as well, but it was very poorly done. It didn't feel cohesive at all to me--more like a series of scenes that had been tacked together by a bunch of disorganized people. I also really did not like the CG. It was even cornier than The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe. Jolie really pulled off the mannerisms and voice of Maleficent; that was my favorite part. I didn't really see her motivation for playfully picking on the fairies in the beginning (after they'd hidden Aurora in the cottage). It seems strange and made her efforts feel half-hearted really early on. Her resolve went away so quickly that it made the curse scene feel out completely of place. I understand that she was a good person in the end and realized that she harmed an innocent to get to someone else, and that's nice, but her flip-flop from happy nature-loving fairy to evil queen to college prank wizard felt odd. And why was she wearing a leather catsuit in those final scenes??
Coulson was rather busy, the collapse of shield was happening in the tv show concurrent to the movie.Captain America: The Winter Soldier
I loved it. I don't read comics, so I don't care if it's true to the original comic story (the MCU is its own continuity anyway). What I saw was a movie that successfully melded the cynical spy thriller genre with an idealistic, no nonsense do-good superhero. It posits idealism and freedom against order and security, with Captain America caught in the middle of it. Chris Evans is fantastic as the Captain, and Anthony Mackie was great as Falcon. The friendship between Sam Wilson and Steve Rogers was believable, two returning vets who've lost their best friends in war bonding together. In fact, that was one of the parts I liked best about the movie - that it treated Steve not as a man stuck in the past, but as a veteran returning home from war to a world he doesn't recognize anymore and is having trouble adjusting back to. Sure, the scene where he sits in on a veteran's support group organized by Sam isn't very exciting, but to me, it's very respectful of everyone who's served - it says, "If even Captain America is having a hard time dealing with coming home, you don't have to be ashamed of having a hard time, too." And when it came time to kick ass, Falcon certainly held his own - the flying combat scenes were intense and fast and thrilling.
One of the highlights, naturally enough, is the fight choreography. The fights are fast and brutally pragmatic for the most part rather than flashy - every character uses their environment, improvised weapons, and backup to their advantage whenever possible. What I also liked was that each character used an appropriate combat style for their training and body type. Georges St Pierre as Batroc was especially good, and rather than coming off as goofy, he came off as badass, using the French military's version of Savate; Captain America has definitely learned quite a few new MMA-type moves; The Winter Soldier, in keeping with his cover as a Soviet agent, seems to use a version of Combat SAMBO; Black Widow, since she is much smaller than most of her opponents, uses speed, leverage, and torsion to compensate for her comparative lack of power.
If there's any complaint to be made, it's a minor one - that The Winter Soldier himself is a pivotal but small role. Now, don't get me wrong, he's awesome in each scene he's in - you are left with no doubt that he's every bit a match for the Captain and he absolutely mows through basically everyone else. I really look forward to seeing more of him.
Well worth seeing, and if I wasn't going to see Godzilla soon, I'd happily see it again.
PS - okay, one other small complaint: No Coulson.
Oh, absolutely. And you know, once again we see Captain America's real superpower: to inspire the people around him to do better. To find it within themselves to stand up to evil and so, "No. I will not be part of this, and even if it costs me my life, I will do my best to stop you." That delay from that geek was long enough to allow Captain America and Falcon to be in place to take down the hovercarriers. If the carriers had been online 30 seconds sooner, thousands would have been wiped out in an instant. Instead, one mousy little nerd feels the gun to his head, and shaking and scared, manages to delay them long enough to save the day. All the non-HYDRA members of SHIELD who were killed in the attempted coup gave their lives to keep the bad guys from winning, because Captain America told them the truth, and trusted them to stand up for what was right. And they succeeded - every second they bought, every HYDRA minion that was downed and unable to be thrown at Cap and Falcon, was worth it.Coulson was rather busy, the collapse of shield was happening in the tv show concurrent to the movie.
My favorite part of winter soldier was the computer tech refusing to launch the helicarrier. He's this mousy little guy, with a gun pointed at him, but with cap announcing the truth behind what he would be launching, he refuses. "I can't, sir. Captains orders."
Okay, strike what I said.I ordered the Blu-ray box set of all three Friday, it should be here today.
Captain America is a better Superman than Superman nowadays. That's what the MCU has really gotten right for me. Heroes can be flawed, yes, but in the end, they're heroes because of who they are, not what their powers allow them to do. Also, regarding the comics, they kept pretty damn close to the origins of the Winter Soldier from the comics, with the exception of Bucky not being a child, of course.Oh, absolutely. And you know, once again we see Captain America's real superpower: to inspire the people around him to do better. To find it within themselves to stand up to evil and so, "No. I will not be part of this, and even if it costs me my life, I will do my best to stop you." That delay from that geek was long enough to allow Captain America and Falcon to be in place to take down the hovercarriers. If the carriers had been online 30 seconds sooner, thousands would have been wiped out in an instant. Instead, one mousy little nerd feels the gun to his head, and shaking and scared, manages to delay them long enough to save the day. All the non-HYDRA members of SHIELD who were killed in the attempted coup gave their lives to keep the bad guys from winning, because Captain America told them the truth, and trusted them to stand up for what was right. And they succeeded - every second they bought, every HYDRA minion that was downed and unable to be thrown at Cap and Falcon, was worth it.
I read this as box set of all three Fridays, as in the Ice Cube classic and then awful two sequelsI ordered the Blu-ray box set of all three Friday, it should be here today.
Oh thank God I'm not the only one.I read this as box set of all three Fridays, as in the Ice Cube classic and then awful two sequels
Someone edit this appropriately; I'm too tired to be clever.I read this as box set of all three Fridays, as in the Ice Cube classic and then awful two sequels
godzilla blowing weed smoke in mothra's face until she decides to chill and just leave us alone[DOUBLEPOST=1401857199,1401857105][/DOUBLEPOST]I'm suddenly trying to imagine what a giant monster version of the Friday movies would be like.
although now that I think of it, it's probably a TERRIBLE idea to get giant monsters high since their munchies would probably kill the human race faster than beforegodzilla blowing weed smoke in mothra's face until she decides to chill and just leave us alone
That could EASILY be a Robot Chicken sketch. And it'd be hilarious.godzilla blowing weed smoke in mothra's face until she decides to chill and just leave us alone[DOUBLEPOST=1401857199,1401857105][/DOUBLEPOST]
although now that I think of it, it's probably a TERRIBLE idea to get giant monsters high since their munchies would probably kill the human race faster than before
It has to have the most boring first 25 to 30 minutes of any Godzilla movie.Godzilla v. Gigan is a weird movie for me. On the one hand the plot is ridiculous, and the talking kaiju is pointless. On the other hand, Gigan is the greatest action figure of all time. I guess I'll just take the good then.
Though I'll admit I wish the artist's monsters would appear in the movie, at least for surrealness sake.
I'll agree on the weird part. Power to you, but it felt like an endless slog for me. I do appreciate the factoid that Toho told the director, Yoshimitsu Banno, that he would never work on another Godzilla movie, and then 40+ years later Gareth Edwards gave him a token position on Godzilla 2014.I fucking love that one, its just so damned weird!
I haven't seen it yet, but I saw it as an animated, kid-friendly version of Evolution.Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2: Fun little kids film, really loved the foodimal's designs.
I'm just going to blame this on the mango-flavored rum. I don't remember posting it. But it's funny as all hell.XMen: DOFP
Hugh Jackman's naked ass.
Coulda been the three or four six-packs, I dont' know.Everyone is always blaming something like the rum, tequila, vodka, beer, wine, jagermeister....