…although the novel was published in 1979.
Spoilers, but I’ll warn you before I get there. There’s actually so much I want to talk about there, but I’m hoping not to be too long-winded.
…although the novel was published in 1979.
Spoilers, but I’ll warn you before I get there. There’s actually so much I want to talk about there, but I’m hoping not to be too long-winded.
It took two years to get this out to theaters. That’s weird. Although, it was kind of a dud. Still, I do think it’s worth talking about.
In Finland cars are considered classics if they are at least 25 years old. Following that same rule, I have arbitrarily decided that a movie needs to be of a same age to qualify as a classic. However, not all movies of that age are classics.
Since in some of these the magic is the movie, I can’t really avoid spoilers, so I’m not going to.
Maybe this is just a problem with trailers in particular, but the trailer for this movie didn’t really sell me on it. Sure, there’s a mystery, but the mystery didn’t seem very intriguing in the way it was presented. It felt like the movie would focus on a different thing, but after this got 95% on Rotten Tomatoes, I thought I have to see this. It did help that it’s directed by the guy who did Barbarian.
I try not to watch YouTube Shorts, because it’s easy to just swipe to the next one and thus spend much more time then you were planning to. However, I had a few minutes of waiting, so I did just that. (It’s fine to watch them if you know your scrolling is going to be interrupted.)
That’s 264 movies. I have seen quite a few before I started this almost three years ago when the list was published, but since many of the movies are not readily available, it took me this long to see them all.
Just based on pure stats.
Fantastic Four is essentially a bad concept.
For the record, I’m not for it, but I do get there are situations where it might actually work.