I have no problem with comedy. I just don't like Mr. Cohen's style of comedy so this news is less than thrilling.
Who says he'll be playing things for comedy? He's really good at straight drama as well. I'd say better.
I have no problem with comedy. I just don't like Mr. Cohen's style of comedy so this news is less than thrilling.
He's a good actor and I doubt he'll be writing much.
I still find him a highly annoying presence. Again, no thrill here.Who says he'll be playing things for comedy? He's really good at straight drama as well. I'd say better.
I'm not a fan of his comedy, but I've enjoyed his dramatic work. He was excellent as Abie Hoffman in "The Trial of the Chicago 7".I still find him a highly annoying presence. Again, no thrill here.
Some actors have a presence that just rubs me wrong. He is one of them.I'm not a fan of his comedy, but I've enjoyed his dramatic work. He was excellent as Abie Hoffman in "The Trial of the Chicago 7".
I know it was kind of a joke on the show, but I actually really enjoyed the song. I'm a huge fan of musicals, and that really felt like exactly the kind of song I would expect to see in a MCU Captain America musical. Honestly, I would love to see them do a real life version of Rogers the musical.If we're going to do that, Save The City (I Can Do This All Day) needs to be nominated for an emmy.
I'll admit, when I read the first few Spider-Man issues a few months back, I found the dialouge a little cheesy, but I think a lot of that was just the way comics of that era were written, and even then wasn't really bad, it was a very different style from what we're used to today. But pretty much everything else about them, the characters, stories, ect were great.Let's be honest - we all love Stan, but his writing was total shit. Comics were mostly unreadable until the 80s had a few decent ones, and the 21st century for most.
Exactly. And the writing evolves over time, Buy the time I was reading comics, some five or six years after Spider-Man's debut things were already changing.I'll admit, when I read the first few Spider-Man issues a few months back, I found the dialouge a little cheesy, but I think a lot of that was just the way comics of that era were written, and even then wasn't really bad, it was a very different style from what we're used to today. But pretty much everything else about them, the characters, stories, ect were great.
Wholeheartedly disagree--it was the one and only Hulk production of the MCU where the Banner/Hulk characters were treated not as an add-on in films driven by / largely about other characters, but they were closer to the spirit of the Stevenson-eqsue, dual-identity tragedy established in the Silver Age Hulk comics.
Most of its output has suffered from the factory conveyor belt syndrome; it does not matter that the skin--the trappings are different, there's still a sameness and predictability.
He is a good enough actor to give us anything that could be required of him. If they require him to act like Borat, then I will be disappointed, but there is no indication of that being the case.
But it was never on the level of what is seen in some of the films, where quips are fired off with the rapidity of a 4th of July skyrocket show.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the reason we never got a full Mark Ruffalo Hulk movie has something to do with Universal continuing to have the distribution rights for standalone Hulk movies.
Turning to TV, while none of the MCU shows are perfect, other than The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (which was generic and disappointing, largely because it was afraid to be too political)
My issue with the MCU these days is more that the stakes are just set too goddamn high all the time. Every movie can't be about something threatening Earth/all of reality, as it makes the higher stakes of the Avengers movies not mean anything.
We need more projects like She-Hulk or Werewolf by Night which aren't afraid to tell smaller-scale stories within the MCU.
Yes it was. There have always been full-comedic comics alongside the less comedic ones. Just because one doesn't like them or didn't read them doesn't mean they never existed.
"Never on the level..." is not saying it "never existed." Lee's Spider-Man scripts were never a quip-fest akin to what is in the average MCU script, and Amazing Spider-Man's scripts steadily moved away from what little humor was there into the markedly superior Romita/Lee/Conway/Kane eras of the title.
Interesting that you said that, since there were and continues to be screams from some parts of the fanbase (echoed by certain YouTube shows--even those who are not identified as being on the sociopolitical Right) who accused The Falcon and the Winter Soldier of being "too political", "woke", and resented the entire Bradley/Wilson statements on the nature of the black foundational journey in American history, and the expected reception to a black Captain America (which Spellman wisely aimed at viewers as much as characters in the story).
They had outlier shows like that back in the Netflix days, where Luke Cage, Jessica Jones, The Punisher and Daredevil had their own unique, strong identities / manner of story development which were not all pointing to a farm's worth of Easter Eggs and teases to Massive, Galactic Conflict #3,000,000,000.
"Never on the level..." is not saying it "never existed." Lee's Spider-Man scripts were never a quip-fest akin to what is in the average MCU script, and Amazing Spider-Man's scripts steadily moved away from what little humor was there into the markedly superior Romita/Lee/Conway/Kane eras of the title.
I always thought that Spidey was notorious for talking constantly in the middle of combat?
That was always the appeal for him as one of the (few) comic book characters I actually enjoyed.I always thought that Spidey was notorious for talking constantly in the middle of combat?
The show was just so weird because it seemed to be going in one direction, and suddenly changed course. Karli and her cause are clearly meant to be sympathetic, and Sam wants to side with her, but then she starts killing people just because she has to be the villain.
Even worse is how the series sets up John Walker to be the actual antagonist of the show, and then gives him a half-hearted redemption arc in the last episode for no particularly good reason.
The show did have a few cogent things to say about race (basically the only time race is addressed in the MCU other than in the most shallow manner imaginable)
I'd argue though that tonally Netflix Marvel was much more samey though. Everything's grounded/street level, everything is dark and gritty, everything's taken a bit more seriously, etc.
I always thought that Spidey was notorious for talking constantly in the middle of combat?
The show was just so weird because it seemed to be going in one direction, and suddenly changed course. Karli and her cause are clearly meant to be sympathetic, and Sam wants to side with her, but then she starts killing people just because she has to be the villain.
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