What's with the hobbit feet?
Probably to protect his actual feet for a barefoot running scene.
Angel ,'Chosen'
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What's with the hobbit feet?
Probably to protect his actual feet for a barefoot running scene.
he looks...not good.
He does, however, look almost exactly like Captain America as drawn by Kevin Maguire in the Adventures of Captain America, Sentinel of Liberty limited series.
I'm still psyched.
I didn't realize it was set in the past. Is that a spoiler? I'm wondering how they're going to fold him into The Avengers.
Laga, in the comic books, Captain America was preserved in ice for several decades after the end of WWII, only to be discovered by the Avengers later on.
What really happened was that after WWII superheroes became unpopular and Captain America's comic book was canceled. After they became popular again in the 1960s they used him being frozen as a way to retcon the character back into existence.
Tivo alert: They're showing lots of classic Hammer Horror on TCM for this October, starting this Friday with Horror of Dracula (the first Christopher Lee Dracula, and the second horror movie of the Hammer explosion after Curse of Frankenstein).
They're also showing Brides of Dracula right after, and that's one of my favorite Hammers. It doesn't have Lee, but it has Cushing in one of his best performances as Van Helsing, and the story is really fascinating, lots of narrative twists away from the usual tropes, two really interesting female roles.
Ahh cool, Tom, thanks.
Loved the Hammer films when I was a teen!
Loved the Hammer films when I was a teen!
I've been watching a lot recently because I'm writing an article on early sixties horror. They vary quite a lot from flick to flick.
For example, their version of The Mummy is great - maybe the best - but all its sequels suck.
The Frankenstein movies are each different in tone and style, with the good doctor being shaded very differently in each one. At first he's arrogant, then he becomes more symphathetic, then he's an ice cold sociopath. But Cushing's great in all of them. I'm very curious to see Frankenstein Created Woman which has a curious premise (a man's soul transmitted into a woman's body. Something they'll go back to later in their Hammer career with Dr. Jekyll and Mrs. Hyde).
Lee was very hesitant to be typecast as Dracula, and had to be coerced back to the role. That's why he wasn't in Brides of Dracula and why when he finally returned he doesn't do any dialogue at all for most of an entire film.
I just watched the Hammer Phantom of the Opera recently and it's a weird mix of excellent performances (Herbert Lom is great in the lead), deadly slow pacing, weird focus (on the young lovers - who the fuck cares about Christine's beau?), and cool ass sets (loved the Phantom's lair).