It made me laugh how the only sex scene they skipped is the heterosexual one, lol.
It's very well done from all departments (even the tape is too slick) but there's too much backstory and investigation, which is why I prefer the original.
I thought this was a solid episode. They kept it lean and mean.
Loved the setting but the story is just another variation of Rosemary's Baby.
"M three gan", lol. Good premiere.
Overhyped episode. Nothing new was said. This is like one of those reality reunion episode. I'm not a fan of the format.
What a satisfying series finale. It's very hard to pull them off.
The flashbacks made me feel all emotional and shit, as Leon would say, lol.
It was shocking how the villain got shot while handcuffed. It was shocking he died with 3 episodes left. And it was shocking how the tables turn on Rust.
Amazing episode.
One of the better remakes out there.
What a rotten country to the core. That's all I can say.
I didn't like the focus on the young journalist. I didn't think she was anywhere interesting to follow her home. She started as very unlikable.
Wait why did they split the episode?
All of the others are 30 minutes long.
Only good thing I can say about this episode is that the animation is growing on me.
Silent ending credits. Shit just got real.
The opening is brutal and I can't imagine how much harder to watch was 40 years ago when people were less desensitized to graphic violence.
The right wing politics of this movie makes Rambo look like hippie stuff.
It starts to drag by the second hour but it's still fun.
Having already seen A Small Light (and loved it), this feels more of the same. Having said that, the season preview at the end looked good.
Part Deux is more consistently funny than this one.
I grew up watching this on TV. I hadn't seen it in more than 2 decades. It's so stupid. It's a good thing it doesn't take itself too seriously.
Weakest episode of the season. That Covid plot feels like 4 years old. Bruce cameo was wasted.
It was kind of lowkey for a season finale.
After 7 episodes we finally see the purpose of the dying dude.
There's a good 15 minutes episode in here. They just needed to cut all the personal relationships stuff.
Also, if you watch this without a good subwoofer, you missed out on some weird thumping sound at the end. Dune vibes, lol
This episode went full on Independence Day.
I had high expectations considering the talent involved in front and behind the camera. At 2 hours long is a drag. It's a boring melodrama for most of the running time. It picks up once they arrive to Tombstone.
Everything's been said already but what makes the movie even more unwatchable is the awful camera work. Doug is not a filmmaker that's known for his subtle directing but this felt like it was directed by someone with ADD.
Calling out discrimination and preaching tolerance? The X-men have gone woke!
-some clueless idiot.
I grew up watching the original but this felt a bit corny.
The animation looks worse than what it was 30 years ago. There's no fluidity in the movements.
And what's with the cinematic aspect ratio? So dumb...
As someone that dislikes group chats and has been put in the uncomfortable position of having to turn down an invitation, I felt seen. Lol.
I don't know why people are so harsh on this movie. It's a light, fun, quicky Sunday afternoon movie.
Maybe because of how unapologetically lesbian it is?