Not exact matches
There's a
scene in Rampage, the latest
movie adaptation
of an old -
ass — sorry, «vintage» — video game, in which an albino silverback gorilla named George flips the bird at Dwayne «The Rock» Johnson.
Most
scenes have little in terms
of pushing forward a story, merely existing to show us how a couple
of dumb stoners make
asses of themselves, including accidentally imbibing urine, urinating on their nosy neighbor, and sing songs that are as seemingly ad - libbed as every other aspect
of the
movie.
«She's the Han Solo
of the
movie,» the breakout MVP
of the MCU says about her
scene - stealing, booze - swilling bisexual Asgardian
ass - kicker
While the music score was was cool and set the tone
of the
scenes, the
movie missed a bad
ass song like Marilyn Manson's «Killing Strangers» from the first
movie.
There's also the introduction
of kick -
ass mutant Domino portrayed with kinetic magnetism by «Atlanta» firebrand Zazie Beetz, the actress at times running away with the entire
movie, stealing
scenes left and right from both Reynolds and Brolin with ease.
Back in school, my friends and I routinely joked about making compilation videos
of certain formulaic
scenes that appear in
movies, so you would have, for instance, a four hour video
of episodes where the good guy cop visits the captain's office to get his orders or a (new) partner or an
ass chewing.
To say that this is not a
movie to everyone's tastes is to understate the point; Swiss Army Man leans into its vulgar absurdity at every turn, beginning with a triumphant opening
scene of Dano riding Radcliffe's corpse across the water like a speedboat — powered,
of course, by his
ass wind — and only getting more gonzo from there.