-
Posts
4,900 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Reputation Activity
-
-
-
-
slikmar got a reaction from Matt the Bruins in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
-
-
-
slikmar got a reaction from Hermit in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
slikmar got a reaction from Lord Liaden in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
slikmar got a reaction from Lee in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
slikmar reacted to unclevlad in 2022-23 NFL Thread
Well, considering the Niner game...or the Seahawks game...or the Texans game...or the Colts game...or the Jets game...
There's a VERY, VERY high bar for Worst Ever Look, just this season, to pick from
Oh, you mean the uniforms.....
I don't have ESPN+ either, and I am soooo glad I can't be tempted...doesn't help the fact that the over-under is set at 39.5, and my feeling is...the under is close to a bloody LOCK.
BIG spreads this week. Eagles -10.5 over Steelers, Cowboys -9 over Bears, Bills -11 over the Packers (!!!!). Well, hey, the Bears were +8.5 against the Pats, so maybe they can double up. Hey, if they can pull it off, they might become my favorite team...for a week or two, anyway.
Interesting points from NFL.com's power rankings:
-
slikmar got a reaction from Ternaugh in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
slikmar got a reaction from Pattern Ghost in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
On one of the web comics I read, the main writer's daughter had discovered the MCU - due to She-Hulk. So he is watching his way through the MCU with her. He made a great comment that I think shows a major difference in why I liked Favreau's directing vs Waititi:
The Favreau Effect
I say “somehow”, but it’s largely thanks to Jon Favreau. He made a lot of decisions that established the MCU formula. In fact, the first Iron Man addresses some common complaints of later MCU movies. There are plenty of jokes, but it doesn’t feel like the movie needs to hit a quips quota. And not every character is funny. Really, it’s just Tony and Happy. Everyone else is serious.
Speaking of serious, the film takes its villain seriously. No jokes about the villain’s name, not off hand comments at the villain’s expense, no scene of the villain looking foolish. In fact, the finale is the longest stretch of the movie without a joke.
Director Jon Favreau knew when to emphasize the fantastic and when to ground Iron Man. Stark Industries weapons, for example, aren’t outside the realm of modern military possibility. And the Iron Man suit doesn’t have a technological solution to every problem. It has, like, two weapons. This emphasizes that without the suit, Tony Stark still has superpowers.
Jon Favreau got a lot of credit for directing the movie that launched the MCU, but these days Kevin Feige seems to be the name equated to its success. I know Favreau still regularly appears as Happy Hogan and he works with Disney on Star Wars, but I wonder if we’ll ever see him direct another MCU film.
Basically, he knows when to be funny and when to be serious. Ragnarok had way to many moments of try to be funny when it should be serious.
-
slikmar reacted to Christopher R Taylor in DC Movies- if at first you don't succeed...
DC seems to be willing to lean into its characters a bit more than Marvel. They are often more faithful in their adaptations, then they're way off base and crazy, its hard to predict. I still think a Booster Gold movie would be a big winner.
Update: watched Black Adam, it was pretty fun. Not a great movie, but worth 3 stars out of 5 for just entertainment. Dr Fate and Hawkman really propped up what was a pretty weak plot with some annoying kids and weak themes of oppressors and breaking the bondage of nameless bad guys (I mean, they had a name, it was Intergang but, they were just interchangable villains that vanished without explanation in the third act).
There was a LOT of killing, with Black Adam doing the bulk of it and as is typical in DC movies, a ton of property damage. The main non super characters had their home obliterated, just blown to pieces and trashed inside. Black Adam is apparently the Kool Aid Man but no one seems to care.
It felt an awful lot like they were trying to make their own Wakanda, this time Arabic with its magical mineral that is never really explained and more or less ignored halfway through the movie. But the action is fun, Dr Fate is depowered quite a bit but entertaining and they made his magic feel unique and interesting (and Pierce Brosnan does a great job). Hawkman was interesting as well, for the first time I kinda liked the character. There's a wind girl in the movie as well and the way they used her and how she looks was truly amazing to behold. Atom Smasher is mostly dorky kid comic relief.
There is a lot of what I considered inappropriate humor, with people being murdered horribly played for laughs. I mean they are bad guys but uh is it that funny to see someone fall screaming to their death? The audience thought so. A really awkward romance shows up in the movie but thankfully is really background stuff. I appreciate DC's commitment to superheroes; they use their superhero names, they wear the costumes, they do not back off from it at all.
Really, in the DC universe lots of people would have shown up to help the people of Wakan-- I mean Khandaq, such as the Justice League, but DC movies feel more like isolated stories, they aren't feeling so forced that they have to have one big overarching storyline or make everything connected. Each story is its own story and that feels nice to me.
-
slikmar reacted to Old Man in Funny Pics II: The Revenge
whyyyy why would you do that to me I thought I was your friend friends aren't supposed to psychologically traumatize each other
-
-
slikmar reacted to Hermit in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
Ant-Man has been my surprise "Ooo I like this a lot more than I thought I would" of marvel heroes , so odds are I'll like it. But i do hope they don't go too dark on this one
-
-
slikmar got a reaction from Starlord in 2022-23 NFL Thread
Now that is a bold faced lie. There is no way you could have watched something that doesn't exist.
-
slikmar got a reaction from Pariah in 2022-23 NFL Thread
Now that is a bold faced lie. There is no way you could have watched something that doesn't exist.
-
slikmar got a reaction from Cygnia in 2022-23 NFL Thread
Now that is a bold faced lie. There is no way you could have watched something that doesn't exist.
-
slikmar reacted to tombrown803 in Marvel Cinematic Universe, Phase Three and BEYOOOOONND
How much are tickets to watch that show?
-
slikmar reacted to Cancer in Funny Pics II: The Revenge
Linked rather than pasted due to f-bomb.
though the f-bomb isn't gratuitous, perhaps
-
slikmar reacted to BoloOfEarth in Funny Pics II: The Revenge
Too subtle for me. I still don't get it.
-
slikmar reacted to Pariah in 2022-23 NFL Thread
I guess the Broncos — Jets game will be starting soon. Before that happens, let me simply say this: When I die, I want the Denver Broncos to be my pallbearers so they can let me down one last time.