The Forensic Records Society
Book
The award-winning, Booker and Goldsmiths Prize-shortlisted author Magnus Mills is back with his best...
Today Will be Different
Book
'Whipsmart, dazzling, darkly comic and deeply touching. I loved it!' Marian Keyes A brilliant new...
MetaMAUS
Book
'Spiegelman has turned the exuberant fantasy of comics inside out by giving us the most incredible...
Not George Washington
Book
This early novel, written in collaboration with a friend, is a fascinating curiosity which suggests...
Em and the Big Hoom
Book
Brilliantly comic and almost unbearably moving, Jerry Pinto's Em and the Big Hoom is one of the most...
Paul Morrissey recommended The White Sheik (1952) in Movies (curated)
Kirk Bage (1775 KP) rated Aquaman (2018) in Movies
Jan 22, 2021
LeftSideCut (3778 KP) rated Man of Steel (2013) in Movies
Aug 29, 2019 (Updated Oct 25, 2019)
This first entry into the DCEU was a pretty enjoyable spectacle for the most part, and as it stands, is my personal highpoint of the up and down franchise.
The first half carries a more serious tone, as we're given the most brooding Superman to date. I actually enjoyed watching Clark Kent go about his life, and don't find it as boring as a lot of people.
The second half is pretty much all action. I'll start off here by saying that the CGI and effects used in MoS are pretty solid - definitely better than any of the DC movies that have followed.
It's an absolute spectacle for sure, although the climatic battle does tread dangerously close to Transformers levels of dumb destruction.
It just about gets away with it though, and tops off a gorgeous looking movie nicely.
Not too bad at all, it's a damn shame the quality didn't stick. (Fingers crossed for Joker though!)
Awix (3310 KP) rated Angel Has Fallen (2019) in Movies
Aug 21, 2019 (Updated Aug 21, 2019)
Thoroughly mechanical and frequently quite dull stuff, leavened only by the odd narrative curve-ball - we meet Poppa Banning, who is also a swivel-eyed psycho, but a comic relief one played by Nick Nolte. There is some stuff about Banning being framed for colluding with the Russians which seems mainly pitched to appeal to the red baseball cap crowd (I would say the film's depiction of the US presidency had completely departed from reality, had the presidency itself not already done that many months ago). There is something oddly tender and even perhaps romantic to the concluding tussle to the death between Butler and Danny Huston (who at least is good value). And it is less grimly objectionable than the previous one. But all in all - my advice, Gerard? Take the desk job.