Well, I think Cyborg is incredibly doable, what with attachments and such.
I think maybe Bruce Wayne might be more fun in the sack than Bats, but I'd have to try both to be sure. I'm guessing Green Arrow is fun, but it seems he's been ruined these days.
I'm guessing Green Arrow is fun, but it seems he's been ruined these days.
Just don't wear yellow lingerie.
eta: Or am i confusing him with Green Lantern?
You are confusing Green Arrow and Lantern. Lantern = yellow bad.
Forget Ollie.
His boy Roy is where it's at.
You are confusing Green Arrow and Lantern. Lantern = yellow bad.
See, I knew this stuff was too complicated.
How many other "green" superheroes are there? Could Kermit be "Green Frog"?
eta: Ooh. Forgot about Green Hornet!
More random thoughts about
The Prestige:
Angier's little "I did it for the LOVE" bit at the end was total bullshit, not even buyable as "unreliable narrator" based on anything we'd seen of the character up until then.
I was mostly okay with the way they changed Angier's secret for the movie, except that, having done his trick once, he could now use Borden's secret. I know that in both the book and the movie Angier was unable to accept Borden's trick was that simple, but it didn't quite fly in the movie. The things that worked about the change was that they were then able to frame the story in a better way for a film (rather than having descendants reading journals), and they were able to work in the
drowning.
Speaking of flying, I loved the canaries being the symbols of the magicians, or really, of Angier:
"He killed him!" "No he didn't, he's right here?" "But where's his brother?" and "You're the lucky one today."
I liked that each magician
died by the same method his wife had, although I believe that in Borden's case, the one who hanged was the one who drove Sara to hang herself, not the one who loved her. If his behaviour can be accepted as loving her, which I don't.
Somehow the parallel of the Edison/Tesla fight came through more strongly in the movie. Maybe because I was snarking about how Tesla was using Edison's lightbulbs (in between snarking about how they walked into the middle of a field of glass lightbulbs in the dark without hitting any).
And I suggest amending Jess' brilliant summary to include the presence of Gollum.
Chuck the Green Hornet, though. Kato's the one you want to do.
Angier's little "I did it for the LOVE" bit at the end was total bullshit, not even buyable as "unreliable narrator" based on anything we'd seen of the character up until then.
oh, Raq, thank you for articulating what I failed to say... articulately.
Oh, yay. I finally saw
The Prestige
a few weeks back, and then I dug up the original conversation here from when it was in theaters and I had totally meant to see it but never quite did. And the next weekend I got the book from the library and read it in an evening. I admire the movie more, but the book is way creepier.
I liked the movie more afterwards than while I was watching it. The more I thought about it, the more I liked it, for all the Nolan-y convolutions and mirroring. I actually watched most of it again last weekend when I stumbled upon it.
Yeah, the characters are horrible people, but it's been established that I don't care so much about that. I get why it's off-putting, though. There's something Kubrick-y about it, I suppose. "Here's a very precise movie about horrid people doing shitty things. Enjoy!"
I don't think Angier's "I did it for love" was meant to be a justification for everything he did. I think it was just... that was what was different about them. Angier wanted to be adored. Borden wanted to be the best. That's why for Borden, his own identity was secondary. It didn't matter to him/them who got the applause. But that was vital (ahem) to Angier.
I was mostly okay with the way they changed Angier's secret for the movie, except that, having done his trick once, he could now use Borden's secret
I think the above is why he couldn't have, though. (Plus, in the movie, until the end he was convinced that there was more to it.) And there was his experience with, um, whozit, the actor. I apologize, but this really is the wording that sprang to mind: He wouldn't have been able to live with himself.
Yeah. Angier's ego would have been in unresolvable conflict with even another version of himself, whereas to Borden sharing the credit—like sharing everything else—was as natural as breathing.