zitothebrave
Connoisseur of Minors
AHHHHHHHH SKEET SKEET SKEET SKEET
Side note, I have a thing for Katie McGrath
AHHHHHHHH SKEET SKEET SKEET SKEET
That movie is gonna earn the biggest box office of all time but the Star Wars film coming out in 2016 (Rogue one) is the one I'm looking forward to. If that movie is done right it will be awesome
Mmmm. Olivia Munn as Psylocke. Apocalypse on the other hand... looks like Ivan Ooze from Power Rangers.
Mmmm. Olivia Munn as Psylocke. Apocalypse on the other hand... looks like Ivan Ooze from Power Rangers.
Anyone else really disappointed with the Apocalypse images so far? I've never read the comics, but was a big fan of the cartoon and he was always portrayed as much larger than the average person.
Google 'Chris pine Olivia Munn' and read that. Wow
This dropped today
And I pooped my pants.
#4--Best of Enemies--The coup de grace of the weekend. Documentary on the William Buckley/Gore Vidal televised skirmishes on ABC's coverage of the 1968 Republican and Democratic conventions. If you have any interest in politics (or in Buckley or Vidal outside of politics), it's a must see. I think the contention of the creators is the film shows where the country's polarization or disintegration of the mainstream media began goes a bit too far, but it is a very insightful portrayal of a turbulent time in American history and how two pretty heady intellectuals showed that the consensus in America was disintegrating. If one loves Buckley and hates Vidal (or vice versa), there's nothing in the movie that will change your mind, but I couldn't help but think as I left the film how these two in addition to obviously disliking each other, envied each other as well. Say what you will about Vidal, but the guy was a superb writer and a master of the language. Buckley took a stab at fiction, but it was not his wheelhouse. On the other hand Buckley was instrumental in building the post-WWII conservative movement in the country that has simply grown in influence. Vidal made a couple of runs at public office, but much like Buckley's fiction, he came up short. Part of me wants to believe that the animosity between the two was fueled by Vidal's desire to be an effective opinion leader and Buckley's desire to be an artiste. Fortunately or unfortunately (depending on one's political stripe), things ended up where they ended up. The filmmakers did a pretty good job of bringing together experts across the political and cultural spectrum to chime in on the impact of the debates (Todd Gitlin, Eric Alterman, Sam Tanenhaus, the late Christopher Hitchens, Buckely's brother Reid, and the Heritage Institute's Robert Wald. Clearly a 4/4 stars from this reviewer, although I think the premise that these confrontations have somehow outlined today's debates goes a tad too far.
#2--Vacation--Being a fan of the original series, I had to see it, out of morbid curiosity if nothing else. Lots and lots of tired, obvious jokes and limbo rock humor--the bar just keeps getting lower--but Ed Helms and Christina Applegate both do a pretty good job. Chris Helmsworth steals the show with an hilarious send-up of Helms' characters' egomaniacal weatherman brother-in-law. Can't go higher than 2 stars, but not as bad as many reviewers led me to believe.
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I enjoyed the Vacation Movie. It's really dumb and yes it's pretty damned predictable. But then again so were the originals. What you're seeing is how the main character reacts to everything. I think Helms did a good job at that. One area I think they failed at was the brother dynamic. It was made into way more than it should have been. COuld have totally cut that out and used the kids as a foil for the dad, like they did in the originals. People forget that overall every character in the originals was built in one way or another to support Chevy Chase. I think the failure of the new one is that it was trying to develop the whole family.