>Is there a show/movie where Todd/ Fake Matt Damon is not a >villainous asshole?
That's Landry Clarke. Even in the undeservedly dark season two arc they gave him on Friday Night Lights, he still came off as the dork who founded Crucifictorious.
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"Walleye, a lot of things are going to go wrong in your life that technically aren't your fault. Always remember that this doesn't make you any less of an idiot"
14. "Agree. More creepy than villainous most of the time." In response to Reply # 7
But he does both well.
>>Game Night > >Id say that was creepy, but not villainous. > >>Fargo > >I wouldn't really call him villainous in Fargo either. He was >a guy who got in over his head, and didn't know how to get >out.
9. "Oh, you should watch Friday Night Lights!" In response to Reply # 6
It's really good.
And if you've enjoyed hating Jesse Plemons as a villain, I can absolutely promise that you'll appreciate that most of America's introduction to the kid was as his character on Friday Night Lights.
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"Walleye, a lot of things are going to go wrong in your life that technically aren't your fault. Always remember that this doesn't make you any less of an idiot"
13. "Very, very good, not sure it's great." In response to Reply # 0 Sat Feb-13-21 04:40 AM by Nodima
Definitely need to watch it again to figure out just how petty my complaints are. I'm definitely not in the GD camp that's displeased with Kaluuya, he put his foot in this thing IMO. Sometimes I felt like O'Neil was just a little too nervy and obvious, or the script just isn't totally selling the scene or something. In the moment I'm thinking of when he says he last words to Hampton in the film, it just seems kind of...weird? I dunno, he just seems very worthy of suspicion a few times during this movie (another moment: when he's talking to George Sams) in a way that kinda slips into breezy biopic cliché sometimes. The sort of thing where a movie doesn't feel the need to convince you something happened because you already know it happened.
A true nitpick: Kaluuya and Stanfield look substantially older than everyone else to the point I was shocked when I looked them up afterward and remembered they're 31 and 29 respectively. I don't think it ever really comes across just how little removed from childhood these people were and misses a chance to hit a huge emotional beat on that level. I don't wish the performances were different though, so it's a hair and makeup thing maybe? Sheen's J. Edgar Hoover almost looks like a Scooby Doo villain in the wrong light.
All that to say, I get why some critics are going the 4/5 route with this. There's a lot to love here and a lot to be impressed by, but I didn't necessarily close the HBO Max app on my PS4 and think I'd just watched a movie of the year contender, either.
Maybe I'll try to catch a matinée on Monday and cross my fingers nobody else has the same idea. There's a chance I just walked away from that first trailer hyping myself up for the best movie of our time, for our time I need the big screen to shake me free from.
15. "I agree with pretty much every word of this." In response to Reply # 13
>Definitely need to watch it again to figure out just how >petty my complaints are. I'm definitely not in the GD camp >that's displeased with Kaluuya, he put his foot in this thing >IMO. Sometimes I felt like O'Neil was just a little too nervy >and obvious, or the script just isn't totally selling the >scene or something. In the moment I'm thinking of when he says >he last words to Hampton in the film, it just seems kind >of...weird? I dunno, he just seems very worthy of suspicion a >few times during this movie (another moment: when he's talking >to George Sams) in a way that kinda slips into breezy biopic >cliché sometimes. The sort of thing where a movie doesn't >feel the need to convince you something happened because you >already know it happened. > > >A true nitpick: Kaluuya and Stanfield look substantially older >than everyone else to the point I was shocked when I looked >them up afterward and remembered they're 31 and 29 >respectively. I don't think it ever really comes across just >how little removed from childhood these people were and misses >a chance to hit a huge emotional beat on that level. I don't >wish the performances were different though, so it's a hair >and makeup thing maybe? Sheen's J. Edgar Hoover almost looks >like a Scooby Doo villain in the wrong light. > >All that to say, I get why some critics are going the 4/5 >route with this. There's a lot to love here and a lot to be >impressed by, but I didn't necessarily close the HBO Max app >on my PS4 and think I'd just watched a movie of the year >contender, either. > >Maybe I'll try to catch a matinée on Monday and cross my >fingers nobody else has the same idea. There's a chance I just >walked away from that first trailer hyping myself up for the >best movie of our time, for our time I need the big screen to >shake me free from. > > >~~~~~~~~~ >"This is the streets, and I am the trap." � Jay Bilas >http://www.popmatters.com/pm/archive/contributor/517 >Hip Hop Handbook: http://tinyurl.com/ll4kzz
16. "The shifting naratives" In response to Reply # 0
between Hampton's storylines and the snitch's storyline took this movie down a notch IMO. The three main storylines of Fred Hampton's rise as a leader, the snitch's attempts to gain access to him, and Hampton's budding romance made the movie feel a bit jumbled and rushed IMO. I didn't feel as if the movie flowed naturally from beat to beat.
Not saying the film is by any stretch of the imagination a bad flick, but the abrupt shifts in the storylines took me out the movie a few times. Reminded me a bit of one of the reasons why I didn't like American Gangster.
"Sean sparks like John Starks, nah, Sean ball like John Wall" - Rest In Power Forever Sean Price.