It's a summer action
flick about comic book characters.
Not exact matches
He talks
about casting and characters, the
flick's tone and connections to the
comics, sets and shooting in Pinewood Studios, music, pressures and his physical state at the time, and reactions to the film.
As a teen
comics fan in the early Eighties, I remember all the talk
about a new Batman movie, so I really like the parts
about the
flick's long development; it's cool to know what was going on behind the scenes while we geeks waited anxiously.
Promoting his sci - fi festival
flick, Ex Machina, Dredd screenwriter Alex Garland spoke to IGN
about a sequel to the
comic adaptation...
I've long since given up on Levy (something
about his child - catcher role in New York Minute (as well as his impenetrable avant - garde turns in Christopher Guest's arrogant
flicks) have turned me right off), but Martin, one of the smartest, most transgressive
comics of his generation, you just sort of want to like.
Nicolás Martínez is essentially
comic relief for the first half of the
flick, while Ariel Levy mostly just mopes
about.
Sol GOode is a decent
flick, not really as good as Swingers, but better than most
comic flicks around nowadays
about twenty - somethings and their problems.
Professor Marston and the Wonder Woman is the fictional behind - the - scenes
flick about the creators of the
comic book heroine Wonder Woman.