Latest Posts(15)
See All8 Actors Who Secretly Reprised An Iconic Role In A Totally Unrelated Movie
Back to the Future 3, the saloon, the 3 guys sitting together each starred in westerns. Also, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Eddie Valiant uses a toon gun that shoots toon bullets. Some of the voices belong to actors from westerns. If I'm not mistaken, I believe some of voices are the actors in the saloon in BTTF 3.
10 Harsh Realities Of Watching Disney’s Original Snow White 87 Years After The Animated Classic Came Out
In the original the Dwarves placed her in a glass box. Anything I put in to a glass box, I see as precious and seek to protect it. Museums put items on display, many of the most precious items are behind some level of security. The classic Snow White is fragile, so much so, she requires protection. In the classic Snow White, the Huntsman spares her. He's a hero and he earned that status. The original Snow White deserves its accolades but it's also a relic. Disney owns these properties and has every right to make changes they see fit. Are they taking a risk, yes. Frozen was a blockbuster and the females in it are incredibly capable. I really don't understand what critics want, strong and capable or weak and fragile? Frozen and Moana both exude strong and capable. Critics want things unchanged, yet denounce weak and fragile. The most vocal critics want a product that cannot exist.
10 Harsh Realities Of Watching Disney’s Original Snow White 87 Years After The Animated Classic Came Out
To me, happily ever after should be earned. Snow White's quality of character should be enough of a justification to deserve a happily ever after. The trope that, only a man can give you a happily ever after is an old, predictable trope. The classic was a product of its time. Snow White purists need not worry, the new Snow White doesn't erase the classic. I enjoyed the new Dumbo, the story was quite different. Creative liberties were taken. The new Pinocchio with Tom Hanks, didn't impress me. The story was a carbon copy, there might have been some creative liberties taken. Disney went the safe route. Now Disney is taking a route less traveled. This new Snow White will be vastly different and Disney is being unapologetic about. If you don't agree with changes, don't watch. Disney is fully aware that this new adaptation was going to cause a firestorm.
No, Betelgeuse & Lydia Shouldn’t End Up Together In Beetlejuice 3, But The Sequel Should Copy A Franchise Twist From Over 30 Years Ago
Didn't age well? Movies are a product of their time. Underage marriage has been taboo for quite some time, people are just more vocal about it; thank you social media. The sequel didn't offer up anything compelling. The story was ok and props to Burton for going with practical effects. If anything the feelings of nostalgia the practical effects illicited show that CGI can backfire. I'd like to see something like a Who Framed Roger Rabbit style of movie. Not a remake or sequel, but something that uses those techniques used in the movie. Acting with a blue screen has become far too common. The bar scene with the penguins, I watching ET or something like it showing how they brought the penguins to life and how Bob Hoskins interacted, there were animitronics used. Something the actors can interact with in real time, practical effects. If Hollywood wants to stick with this legacy sequel concept, tapping into methods that worked quite well at the time seems like a no-brainer.
10 Silly & Lesser-Known Action Movies From The 1990s That Are A Blast To Go Back & Watch
I've heard of some of these, the only 2 that stand out for me are Broken Arrow and The Long Kiss Goodnight. I thought they were both great movies. I can't but I think I even saw Broken Arrow in the theater. I NFL star Howie Long and his plummet off the train.
Dark Back To The Future Theory Solves The Original Movie’s Marty McFly Paradox In The Most Twisted Way
I think time travel leaves artifacts. When traveling through time in the DeLorean, a bubble envelopes Marty. The bubble preserves the Marty 1. The bubble protects the traveler. That explains how old Biff was able to return to the original 2015 in BTTF2, but Doc and Marty can't return to that same 2015 after they traveled to dystopian 1985. Timecop presented changes as being instantaneous while still protecting the traveler. While BTTF posits that any changes made in the timeline become apparent over time. Why isn't Doc aware of his imminent death in 1885? Doc from 1885 had a different life then that of the young Doc in 1955. It's that bubble that protects Doc and keeps him immune to changes. Marty 1 will never suddenly develop new memories of his past, because he's in that bubble. Infinite timelines are created at life defining moments. The Twin Pines mall still exists, in an alternate timeline. When Marty hit the one pine tree in BTTF 1, an alternate timeline was created. But the time line where the pine tree didn't get knocked down still exists.