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OncomingStorm93

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Posts posted by OncomingStorm93

  1. 16 minutes ago, MysteryMovieMogul said:

    It's amazing that Scrubs Season 9 decided to just not hire likable leads.

    Look, I’m not defending Scrubs season 9 from a writing standpoint or directing standpoint. In both areas, it was a weak season after JD departed.

     

    But Eliza Coupe and Kid Franco were great additions. The main new female lead (can’t remember her name) did well, it’s just her character was written overly wide-eyed. And diet-Jason Sudakis as the last new scrub was entertaining, had a good arc. liked him with Coupe.

     

    Again, not defending the overall quality of “Med School”, and would welcome a “revival” season in a heartbeat.

     

     Anyways, I’ve said it here before and will say it again, Secret Invasion should have been saved for Captain Marvel 2.

  2. 11 hours ago, OncomingStorm93 said:

    Just booked a tripleheader (thanks A-List!) for this evening: The Holdovers, Dream Scenario, and Saltburn. Can't remember the last time I've been able to get such a god-tier list of R-rated indie dramadies in one go.


    Man, I got spoiled tonight. Holdovers was my last watch, and the one I’m gonna need to dwell on the most. It’s an Alexander Payne film, Christmas film, Giamatti character study all rolled up into one. What is to be expected and delivered other than excellence and warm fuzzy heartbreak.

     

    Dream Scenario was a diet-fever dream. The first two thirds nailed the unsettling element, the last third tried to get into meta-commentary that I felt tacked on, and the climax of the film lacked punch. Cage was great, I actually got Giamatti vibes from his characterization of the lead Paul.

     

    Finally, Saltburn. Hooo boy. Barry Keoghan lets it all hang out with a ballsy performance here. Rosamund Pike is the scene-stealer among the rest of the  cast, with the most overtly comedic performance. There’s several extended moments in this film that are not going to sit well with casual audiences, and the film doesn’t tie together at the end as neatly as Promising Young Woman, but it’s a go-for-broke journey and it’s the film from this group I’m most eager to catch again.

    • Like 2
  3. I think the best descriptor of MI7 isn't "bombed" or "tanked". It's "flatlined". It had a feint pulse for some time before giving out, and had enough people by the bedside giving it comfort. But it had signs of life. The film's quality isn't in dispute (aside from ranking it within the MI series), and many people acknowledge that the film's release date and "part 1" marketing were both mistakes. And at the end of the day it still made $560m.

     

    Whereas the other films it's being compared to were DOA and people avoided them like the plague. The Flash was utter garbage, and Indy was arriving with too much baggage.

  4. 12 minutes ago, MovieMan89 said:

    Millennials keep Hollywood as we know it going tbh. When we finally do age out like most gens do, it could be a huge problem. Especially for theaters and big budget movies. 

     

    Theaters will adapt. Won't be easy for all, the mom and pops will close and the big chains will consolidate, but theaters will adapt and survive. We saw a taste of it with AMC and the Swift movie. AMC is also experimenting now with live NFL games in theaters. I think you'll see big live sporting events become gradually more common in theaters. E-sports could also tap into that distribution. More concert films of course. And the indie scene, that will always exist.

  5. 3 hours ago, Zakiyyah6 said:

    You can believe it is overrated if you like as everyone is entitled to their opinions but Winter Soldier solidified MCU Captain America's icon status post Avengers. It made him cool to audiences. Captain Marvel desperately needed her own Winter Soldier but Marvel gave Captain Marvel her own Thor: The Dark World instead. 


    almost as if the Secret Invasion storyline was prime material for a Captain Marvel sequel…

     

    Annyway, the Loki finale slapped hard, and I just read that Cap Am 4 got pushed to early 2025, which is the right  move IMO. As I said yesterday, Deadpool 3 is the MCU’s last best chance to get mass audiences back on board, and now it’s the next film in the lineup.

  6. IMO, Deadpool 3 is Marvel’s last best-chance at audience perception course correction.

     

     I do believe that Feige has realized that the MCU has to “grow up” with it’s audience, and the (seemingly) violent Echo, presumably being up-violented Daredevil, R rated Deadpool, and R rated Blade can help reshape the perception of MCU projects.

     

    The MCU’s core audience is a little over a decade older than when The Avengers debuted. The content needs to reflect that. In that regards, The Marvels/Quantumania seemed to regress  in maturity. Multiverse of Madness and Love and Thunder kinda did too, cancer  jokes and corpse resurrection notwithstanding.

  7. I have no opinion about any iteration of the Ms. Marvel character, as I’ve not seen her show or played the Avengers game (though I’m aware of that games many many issues, beyond Ms. Marvel), and I’m not a comics reader.

     

    All I can say is that I’m not surprised that audiences aren’t latching onto a character whose seemingly defining characteristic is that’s she’s a fangirl of another character. Why is that something I should be invested in?

    • Like 2
  8. I just learned now that the second trailer was released 3 weeks ago. It's really difficult for new major trailers to slip my view. Very little social media buzz around the second trailer.

     

    Other than the extended Hugh Grant riff at the end, was another enjoyable trailer. Easygoing charm and whimsy. I expect this to play well over December and into January. Probably a relatively muted opening with good legs. Probably closest to Into The Woods. But tbh these musical films are one of the most unpredictable genres.

  9. I’m not gonna bother reading any of what’s been posted here so far, just gonna share my thoughts on why this film is clearly destined to flop hard:

     

    Firstly, treating D+ characters as AAA. Seriously stupid. It’s a team-up film that’s dragging Carol Danvers down to D+ stature.

     

    Second, horrible marketing. What’s this film even about? The whole focus has been on the three leads being somehow interlinked, which is an interesting hook, but there’s no story from what I can tell for that hook to latch onto. Someone wants revenge on Carol and will overact however much is needed to achieve her goal. That’s all I understand.

     

    This film also looks entirely generic visually. No sense of style. It looks boring!

     

    The film also lacks connections to it’s predecessor that you would expect in a traditional sequel. No Jude Law. No Ronan the Accuser (obviously he’s dead, but the first film still indicated there would be more story between him and Carol). No Maria. No Talos. It’s just Carol and Fury (who doesn’t really count given he’s been in a dozen of these projects by now)

     

    That’s all before we get to the MCU’s squandered goodwill.

     

    I fear that this film’s BoxOffice is gonna make Quantumania look respectable in comparison. Yuck.

    • Like 3
  10. I know nothing about this upcoming remake. I've barely heard anything about it, don't have a strong opinion on the overall quality of the Disney remakes, don't know what controversies may or may not be floating around, nor do I care.

     

    What I can say is that I just saw the photo on Twitter, and was so revolted by the aesthetic that I was compelled to log back in here and say I was reminded of "Cats".

    • Like 2
  11. Caught Bad Money last night. 7/10. Pete Davidson was the audience favorite. Script a bit too straightforward. Directing felt like diet-Adam McKay.

     

    Caught some new trailers though, The Holdovers and Saltburn join Killers and Napoleon as must-watches. Can't recall the last time I've been this pumped for the fall season. I'm not a horror guy, but I think both Freddy's and Thanksgiving have strong box office potential. Those are much more in the vein of millennial horror that drove Smile and Megan to success than a 10th Saw film.

  12. I thought GT was a blast. Some clunky script elements, particularly whenever they tried to integrate gamer lingo, but Blomkamp’s direction was great. His grounded visual style and camerawork was well utilized. And the racing sequences were both surprisingly plentiful and engaging. Well shot/animated/edited. I’m surprised that the budget was only 100m. David Harbour was the standout performance. Having seen the final product, I think the marketing for this film was poorly conceived.

    • Like 1
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