Awesome fun.The moronic critics are giving this negative reviews because it's not deep and psychologically challenging and blah blah blah.It's a movie about human - sized turtles with a ninja arsenal; over the top silliness and
ridiculous action scenes and plot were expected and delivered.
Not exact matches
And, even after seven installments, they still manage to up the ante with increasingly
ridiculous action sequences, car chases and fight
scenes.
Despite a monotonously fashionable mise - en -
scene, Lyne generates some genuine erotic tension between his two stars; you believe in their obsessive relationship, even as most of the
action and staging registers as
ridiculous.
This allows for plenty of
ridiculous - in - a-good-way
action scenes, the best of which finds her levitating a group of armed assailants so they can not harm her.
To make matters worse, around about the same time we get an
action scene that's... well... it's just
ridiculous, and really took me out of the film.
It usually involves a
ridiculous plot, some cheesy dialogue and a cool
action scene or two, but the real draw continues to be seeing how many former
action stars Sylvester Stallone can cram into a single film.
The
action scenes and set pieces sparked by the little minions» screw - ups are loud, long, and too
ridiculous, even when taken for cheap laughs.
We do meet a group of mutants in the film, but with the exception of the pivotal role of Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence), the rest of the mutants (good and bad) are mostly just there to fill out the
action scenes — or in the case of Emma Frost (January Jones), fill out some
ridiculous outfits (which the film does manage to justify... sort of).
The
action scenes from then on all start out okay, but quickly get
ridiculous as Spielberg and co try to up the ante.
This all - American 1986
action flick turned Tom Cruise into a household name and turned heads with its
ridiculous sex
scene.
The
action scenes are wonderfully
ridiculous, performed as an odd combination of street - brawling and wrestling that's as fast - paced as you could possibly imagine; these five ordinary blokes being surprisingly competent fighters is the kind of incongruity that The World's End revels in.
Instead, it's a romantic comedy where the two love interests just so happen to be real - life
action heroes, and while the
scenes between Pine and Hardy in the field are a lot of fun, the main plot involving Reese Witherspoon dating both men at the same time is beyond
ridiculous.
But he is absolutely bland in every
scene in which he has to talk (though it's not completely his fault — the soap - opera script is written at a bad, junior high school level) and quite unconvincing in the mindless
action sequences filled with
ridiculous mid-air, slow - motion sword play.