Red Letter Media

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

Favorite recurring character? (Select 4)

  • Jack / AIDSMobdy

    Votes: 257 24.0%
  • Josh / the Wizard

    Votes: 77 7.2%
  • Colin (Canadian #1)

    Votes: 460 42.9%
  • Jim (Canadian #2)

    Votes: 230 21.4%
  • Tim

    Votes: 386 36.0%
  • Len Kabasinski

    Votes: 208 19.4%
  • Freddie Williams

    Votes: 274 25.5%
  • Patton Oswalt

    Votes: 27 2.5%
  • Macaulay Culkin

    Votes: 541 50.4%
  • Max Landis

    Votes: 64 6.0%

  • Total voters
    1,073
I agree that a major problem with Whedonesque writing is that many characters lose their individual character voices in service of a quip.
This is a tangent, but this drives me crazy about Castlevania on Netflix, too. I still love the show, but it's way too snarky.

"Thankfully," Ellis has been fired for using his fame to meet women (which is the only reason men do anything), so who knows what the dialogue will sound like soon?
 
I have a strong feeling that if I rewatch it then I'd hate it. The best thing about the first Avengers was the novelty of super heroes worlds colliding. Besides that I don't remember a single thing from the film besides Hulk beating up Loki, which is funny but cements the problem of Marvel films have absolutely shit villains.
I hated the Avengers the first time I saw it, and I still think it’s near the bottom of the MCU totem pole. Its significance and influence on the industry (good or bad) cannot be denied, but I think it’s another one of those movies that’s not really going to hold up to scrutiny years after the fact.
 
I think it’s another one of those movies that’s not really going to hold up to scrutiny years after the fact.

I came to realize near Endgame that all of the MCU films were only good as "events", and as actual films they're quite forgettable. To this day, I'm pretty sure the only MCU films I've ever rewatched were the first two Iron Mans and Winter Soldier. And even with Winter Soldier probably being my favorite movie out of the bunch, I think I've only watched it a grand total of 3 times and one of those was simply because I was stuck at dialysis and it was on TV.

As I get older and find myself unable to hang out with friends like I could before and my speedy transition out of being a consumerist faggot, I find I have absolutely no desire to watch anything MCU related and whenever I do happen to catch a glimpse of something MCU related I'm massively annoyed by it.
 
Last edited:
This is a tangent, but this drives me crazy about Castlevania on Netflix, too. I still love the show, but it's way too snarky.

"Thankfully," Ellis has been fired for using his fame to meet women (which is the only reason men do anything), so who knows what the dialogue will sound like soon?
Ellis's metoo-ing/cancelling was so pathetic and half-hearted by today's standards that it makes you wonder just how crazy things are going to get. I've seen both seasons and enjoyed parts but thought it was generally pretty gay (literally and figuratively) and filled with a lot of 2edgy4you type stuff. Like him or not, Ellis can actually write when he tries and my prediction is that the the show is going to get way worse without him and you'll be able to gauge the fall based on the rich and diverse names you see pop up for writing credits. The mega-machiavellian female vampire sisterhood is going to be painful, mark my words.
 
I came to realize near Endgame that all of the MCU films were only good as "events", and as actual films they're quite forgettable. To this day, I'm pretty sure the only MCU films I've ever rewatched were the first two Iron Mans and Winter Soldier. And even with Winter Soldier probably being my favorite movie out of the bunch, I think I've only watched it a grand total of 3 times and one of those was simply because I was stuck at dialysis and it was on TV.
I have almost no overall interest in MCU films. I've seen over half, but only because my friends wanted to, and I didn't mind. There are completely random ones I've never seen. Like Civil War or Endgame or Black Panther. But I'll rewatch the shit out of Guardians of the Galaxy, because Drax is love.

Tried watching Castlevania. Couldn't get past the edgy bullshit and 1 dimensional fedora tipping anti-religious sentiment. I just rewatched Gargoyles instead.

Really like the Snyder Cut review. One thing I appreciate about RLM, is that they are fine praising a movie at one end and lambasting it at the other, and having really weird opinions. I'll never forget Mike loving Independence Day: Resurgence.
 
Ellis's metoo-ing/cancelling was so pathetic and half-hearted by today's standards that it makes you wonder just how crazy things are going to get. I've seen both seasons and enjoyed parts but thought it was generally pretty gay (literally and figuratively) and filled with a lot of 2edgy4you type stuff. Like him or not, Ellis can actually write when he tries and my prediction is that the the show is going to get way worse without him and you'll be able to gauge the fall based on the rich and diverse names you see pop up for writing credits. The mega-machiavellian female vampire sisterhood is going to be painful, mark my words.
There are actually three seasons. Season 3 was dropped last year and is the weakest of the three so far in my opinion, but it's still got a lot of good stuff in it.

I agree, I'm not looking forward to what's coming *sigh*

Tried watching Castlevania. Couldn't get past the edgy bullshit and 1 dimensional fedora tipping anti-religious sentiment. I just rewatched Gargoyles instead.

I don't mind the "edginess" for the most part. Castlevania can be a pretty goofy I.P., and I think it was a good idea to establish a darker and more horrific tone for an adaptation. Again, the dialogue snark that often overwhelms each character's individual voice bothers me much more.

As for the anti-religious stuff, I tend to get annoyed by narratives like that, but I don't think Castlevania is intended to be such. It's more highlighting the corruption within the Catholic church (in the show's that version of the world) and setting a general tone for the show's world ("even the holy men are untrustworthy") than trashing religion itself.
 
Last edited:
As for the anti-religious stuff, I tend to get annoyed by narratives like that, but I don't think Castlevania is intended to be such. It's more highlighting the corruption within the Catholic church (in the show's that version of the world) and setting a general tone for the show's world ("even the holy men are untrustworthy") than trashing religion itself.
IIRC there was a corrupt priest early on who tries to appeal to God when the baddies come for him, and gets explicitly rejected. So within the context of the show God actually exists and has standards.
 
Really like the Snyder Cut review. One thing I appreciate about RLM, is that they are fine praising a movie at one end and lambasting it at the other, and having really weird opinions. I'll never forget Mike loving Independence Day: Resurgence.
But hates the original Independence Day. As far as plots go, the two are aggressively similar to each other and had the same kind of attitude towards special effects. The difference between the original and Resurgence is just how important charismatic actors are to a movie. Resurgence has a lot of Kristen Stewart kind of actors: bland, attractive people who read their lines and nothing else. It's really noticeable in this movie since they've got most of the original cast to be compared to, but every movie has this charisma void in their actors these days.

RLM's reviews of ID4 and Starship Troopers are the only ones that I disagree with them on.
 
As far as plots go, the two are aggressively similar to each other and had the same kind of attitude towards special effects.
I kind of have to disagree. The similarities were skin-deep. It felt like a spec script of an XCOM movie, rather than a sequel to a film everyone knows well.
 
I kind of have to disagree. The similarities were skin-deep. It felt like a spec script of an XCOM movie, rather than a sequel to a film everyone knows well.
I WISH it was an X-com movie. It would have been great watching that African warlord guy wage a guerilla war in the jungles of Africa with the assistance (because movie has to suck Chinese cock) of the Chinese military experimenting on alien technology. Instead of going so big the mothership covers North America, it goes smaller and they fight Alien remnants. Cheaper too since the cast doesn't have to be star-studded. It would only "need" Chinese lady for stunt casting purposes, the African Warlord guy, and maybe Jeff Goldblum (or whoever else wanted to come back).

Instead, the plot of these movies are the same to its detriment and Liam Hemsworth has to be a try-hard Will Smith.
 
I WISH it was an X-com movie. It would have been great watching that African warlord guy wage a guerilla war in the jungles of Africa with the assistance (because movie has to suck Chinese cock) of the Chinese military experimenting on alien technology. Instead of going so big the mothership covers North America, it goes smaller and they fight Alien remnants. Cheaper too since the cast doesn't have to be star-studded. It would only "need" Chinese lady for stunt casting purposes, the African Warlord guy, and maybe Jeff Goldblum (or whoever else wanted to come back).

Instead, the plot of these movies are the same to its detriment and Liam Hemsworth has to be a try-hard Will Smith.
The best independence day movie is Pacific Rim.

(let's not talk about the sequel)
 
independence day is great

ensemble cast, splosions, murica, pew pew, brent spiner on meth, diverse redneck family, jews

everyone's motivations are established and they do things that make sense within the rules of independence day world to achieve their goals

it feels cringey today because the culture has changed in a faggy direction... but those cities getting asploded was some powerful shit when it came out. you didn't see that, like that, in movies before. they establish the patriotism (american, and then human) and keep hitting you with it effectively

they vary the environments and look of the movie... cities, desert, space, area 51 lab, air force one, the nuking houston scene is one of my favorites because it's dark and claustrophobic. you can see very little of what is going on instead of another over the top bright asplosiony mess. visually it's completely unlike most of the rest of the movie and it works

the air battle scenes are also top notch... some shots the fighter planes and alien fighters move kinda slowly and clumsily, but most of them still look fantastic today

independence day has a lot more going for it than not
 
Last edited:
independence day is great

ensemble cast, splosions, murica, pew pew, brent spiner on meth, diverse redneck family, jews

everyone's motivations are established and they do things that make sense within the rules of independence day world to achieve their goals

it feels cringey today because the culture has changed in a faggy direction... but those cities getting asploded was some powerful shit when it came out. you didn't see that, like that, in movies before. they establish the patriotism (american, and then human) and keep hitting you with it effectively

they vary the environments and look of the movie... cities, desert, space, area 51 lab, air force one, the nuking houston scene is one of my favorites because it's dark and claustrophobic. you can see very little of what is going on instead of another over the top bright asplosiony mess. visually it's completely unlike most of the rest of the movie and it works

the air battle scenes are also top notch... some shots the fighter planes and alien fighters move kinda slowly and clumsily, but most of them still look fantastic today

independence day has a lot more going for it than not
Even the virus makes sense since it's a logical inference that the Roswell ship was how the Information Age started. Unfortunately, Emmerich & Devlin didn't rewatch this movie because Bill Pullman makes it clear that the Aliens just want resources in general, not geo-thermal energy which is far more common than garden planets. After all, Brent Spiner told us that the aliens aren't that much different than us.
 
This is a tangent, but this drives me crazy about Castlevania on Netflix, too. I still love the show, but it's way too snarky.

"Thankfully," Ellis has been fired for using his fame to meet women (which is the only reason men do anything), so who knows what the dialogue will sound like soon?
I love that they're not afraid to have spooky demons murder women and children, though.
 
Back
Top Bottom