Are they talking out behind the scenes people like directors, producers, and studio heads? Because, for example, Tom Cruise, Jennifer Lawrence, and Samuel L. Jackson all come from fairly humble beginnings.
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Deadpool 2's Cable doesn't have enough pouches.
(Not surprisingly, about half the comments are "needs more pouches").
I liked the comment that said his feet should be *just* out of frame for the entire movie.
I'm just worried that it's Sony at the helm, as they've had a crap track record of movies.
Who exactly decided it was a good idea to let Guy Ritchie direct a movie about King Arthur?
Did that finally come out?
Came and went. Flopped.
Maybe it'll be Netflixable just for Charlie Hunnam appreciation.
The thing is, an adaptation of the Arthur story transposed into the modern day with the "kingdom" being a British criminal operation could have been a decent new take on an old story. The actual Sixth Century AD legendary characters speaking and acting like modern London thugs, not so much.
What I want to know is who greenlit a $175 million budget for this turkey?
The funniest thing I saw was in the Wikipedia article, where the studio was hoping to launch a six-picture shared Arthurian universe. Guys, c'mon. I know you all want to be Marvel, but there are reasons they succeeded beyond "bunch of movies with many characters, sometimes in common."