- Mar 3, 2012
- 23,082
- 8,730
Kevin Spacey didn't voice Ultron
pretty sure he meant spader.
I still have to watch a legit copy of AOU.. i think half of what shaped my "no wow" factor was the fact it was cam.
Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Kevin Spacey didn't voice Ultron
it comes out next month on blu ray right???My pops is an old school 80s Marvel Comics fan who criticizes movies all the time and he dug the movie completely. The only negative thing I heard him say this time was "the Vision looks mad stupid"
My expectations may have been wayyyy to high for ultron.. Between what I knew from the comics and cartoons and what could potentially be done with that
Louis D'Esposito @louisde2
#CaptainAmericaCivilWar wrapped principle photography today. Congratulations to the Russo brothers and the entire cast and crew.
The movie or the character?
Kevin Spacey didn't voice Ultron
and the ridiculously drawn out Hulk vs Iron Man fight
My grips with AoU were only a couple of things. Ultron wasn't bad enough. It's a recurring problem with the MCU and I do get they're the Avengers.. they're going to win. But Ultron's premise was so cool, he's connected to everything, he can upgrade himself, but at every turn he was getting beat and the final battle is his robo army. I just wanted the feeling of bigger stakes. Even though you know the good guys will win, it just didn't feel big enough like Winter Soldier for example.. even though you knew Cap would still win, the climatic battle scene felt more dangerous and exciting.
And the Thor bath sequence totally took me out of the movie, I wasn't trying to overthink it as I watched but all I could think about was ... well Thor 3 might be interesting. I didn't want a set-up cutaway for another movie, it's the Avengers, this is the payoff from all the solo movies.
I think my expectations were a little too high cause it's still a good movie with great action, cool moments, and hits on themes and character beats we've been seeing develop for years.. but it wasn't as tight and polished as it should ahve been.
spader had no bloopers
GOAT one take actor?
‘Apocalypse’ of comic book shows to descend on Cal State Northridge
“Comic Book Apocalypse: The Graphic World of Jack Kirby,” opens Monday, Aug. 24, 2015, and ends Oct. 10 at the California State University Northridge Art Galleries.
A record 42,000 students expected to flood Cal State Northridge on Monday could face an end to the world.
That’s because the apocalyptic battle between superheroes and supervillains drawn up by comic book legend Jack Kirby will be featured in the largest exhibit of its kind in the nation — and the first at any university — to open Monday at CSUN Art Galleries.
“We call the show ‘Comic Book Apocalypse’ because when you’re dealing with Kirby, nothing less than the end of everything is at stake,” English professor Charles Hatfield, curator of the exhibit, said in a statement. He is “a neglected giant of American comics and popular culture.”
When it comes to comics, think Kirby. The Avengers, X-Men, Fantastic Four, Thor, the Hulk, Captain America, Nick Fury, the Black Panther and the Marvel Universe were all conceived in part by the King of Comics.
And if they weren’t enough, he helped launch such famous Marvel characters as Iron Man, Spider-Man and the Daredevil.
More than 100 pieces of the late artist’s work will be displayed during the CSUN show that runs through Oct. 10, which includes a 200-page catalog.
“Comic Book Apocalypse” also tells the story of the professional cartoonist, born Jacob Kurtzberg to Austrian-Jewish immigrants on New York’s Lower East Side, who pioneered comics for more than half a century. Kirby, a Thousand Oaks resident, died in 1994.
His early work included comic books on crime, Westerns, superheroes and romance, a genre which he helped invent.
His later work includes the Marvel Universe he co-founded with comic book writer and editor Stan Lee, including the Black Panther, the first African-American superhero. He also created such influential comics as the “New Gods” and “Kamandi: The Last Boy on Earth” for DC Comics.
“He was the greatest comic book artist of them all,” said Bob Strauss, a Los Angeles News Group entertainment critic who read Fantastic Four and other Marvel Comics during their heyday in the 1960s. “I always love looking at Jack Kirby art.”
Hatfield, founder of CSUN’s popular “Comics and Graphics Novels” course and the author of the award-winning “Hand of Fire: The Comics Art of Jack Kirby,” said the exhibition is long overdue.
For he said there’s growing academic interest in comics as art, and comics as literature and an influence on popular culture.
“We want to educate CSUN students and the larger community about how comics were actually made,” said Hatfield, founding president of the Comic Studies Society, the first academic association for comic scholars. “This will bring in students to study an understudied part of our culture.”
The Kirby exhibit will also launch Comics@CSUN, an initiative to boost campus interest in comics. Projects include film screenings, speakers and a comics conference planned for next spring featuring student research on comics from across 23 Cal State campuses.
“This is huge,” said art galleries spokeswoman Michelle Giacopuzzi. “This is really cool. I would say it’s a groundbreaking show.”
“Comic Book Apocalypse” at CSUN Art Galleries will include a public reception from 4-7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 29; a gallery talk at 10 a.m. Aug. 31 and a panel discussion set for 1 p.m. Sept. 26. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, noon to 4 p.m., and Thursdays from noon to 8 p.m. For information, go to www.csun.edu/artgalleries, www.facebook.com/CSUNArtGalleries, 818-677-2226.
Affiliation: Former Member of the Intelligencia
Citizenship: Belgian
Place of Birth: Netherlands
Languages: English, Dutch
Ulysses Klaue was an a.ssassin hired to take down T'Chaka at the Bilderberg conference in the case that he refused to negotiate Wakanda's resources including Vibranium. But, Klaue was also there personally, as the Panther k!lled his great-grandfather in the 19th century while this one was trying to annex Wakanda. He was paid ten million dollars for the k!ll.