Thursday, December 31, 2015

Gabe Mayuga's Favorite Moments of 2015

Happy New Year's Eve, everyone! So sorry that I haven't written any of my blog articles since this September. But I guess I was... busy with everything that is most important for me and my Mayuga family like completing and preparing my difficult fall semester George Mason University projects. Aside from all of my stressful moments with my own personal family problems and tragic deaths of loved ones (Leonard Nimoy, Christopher Lee, James Horner, Uncle Joseph Bauzon), I recall some of my favorite moments that I will always cherish besides the nostalgic memories I've had years before the year 2015! The year that went through a lot of major changes with some results that don't meet expectations albeit with reasonable purposes.
My favorite part about this was watching some highly-anticipated movies with surprisingly good word of mouth or disappointing box office figures (like Josh Trank's "Fantastic" Four and Brad Bird's underrated Tomorrowland) that leads to unexpected effects to the current movie industry. My favorite films from summer or fall-winter are Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Mad Max: Fury Road, and Disney/Pixar's Inside Out. But my most favorite moment of all time this year was visiting the Children's Museum in Indianapolis to enter the Transformers exhibit, storing all of the Transformers toys from the past and some activities fun for little kids and long-time Transformers fans like me despite the franchise now no longer getting a lot of attention like they used to have since the pre-AOE TF movies (as the 4th one from last year got a paltry $245 million in domestic areas (unlike the 1st three's $300-400 million grosses in the U.S.) despite its massive success in China, totaling up to over $1.1 billion) back from 2007-2012. It was on display until late July during the time when the latest TV show Transformers: Robots in Disguise premiered on Cartoon Network this Spring and can be seen every Saturday morning at 6:30 A.M., while paling in comparison with a much superior Transformers: Prime show. But it was a fun time reliving my obsession with the Autobot/Decepticon warfare after I was drawn to it via watching the very first live-action film 8 years ago. I am hopeful that the new writers hired (by Akiva Goldsman, of course) for this "cinematic universe" will make Transformers relevant again without bringing up things that I fear would cause critics and even the fans to nitpick in a nonstop way like they have with the upsetting TF sequels since Revenge of the Fallen. Autobots, roll out!
I also visited the Star Wars Costume Exhibition in Times Square of New York during one of my artsbus trips last month. Looking at these costumes from the past 6 films was an experience I've ever had, and will surely make me feel totally excited to see The Force Awakens when it comes out on the opening day, which I will watch 3 days later. My dad and I were amazed at how the costumes and props were once used by characters, with names that only I strongly remember, before Lucasfilm was sold to Disney. While the prequel trilogy have actually underwhelmed a lot of fans, their love for the originals that has the Rebellion, Imperial ships, and Darth Vader will never fade away and will be "strong with the Force." Am curious to how the latest J.J. Abrams-directed film is going to change the franchise?
After being so upset with how The Amazing Spider-Man 2 had turned out, in financial terms (only $709 million, as opposed to the $750-$800+ million grosses the previous 4 got), resulting in the cancellation of the threequel and Andrew Garfield's exit after for just TWO Spidey films, I knew that had Sam Rami's Spider-Man 3 not ended up as the WORST movie of all time (for me, if no one agrees), there wouldn't have been a need for Sony to start a reboot from scratch FIVE YEARS LATER with a new origin that proves how inferior it was to the much-better handled one in the 2002 film (minus the retcon that clearly HURT the traditional Spider-Man origin). Around this February, I was shocked to learn that Sony (after the infamous hack) has agreed to allow Marvel incorporate the Spider-Man characters to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (starting with next summer's Captain America: Civil War) while retaining distribution and creative control over the web-slinging hero! With that confirmation, I was curious about who's going to PROPERLY play Peter Parker/Spider-Man to joke around with any of the fellow Avengers and wash away the bad taste of the post-SM 1&2 trilogy (2007-2014). And sure enough 4 months later, Sony/Marvel has picked TOM HOLLAND (The Impossible, In the Heart of the Sea)! Since then, I had complete faith that young Tom Holland will DO GREAT as our most iconic arachnid superhero (now "2nd place" to the Avengers (specifically, the "invincible" Iron Man) without bringing up something that made Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield act almost "out of character". And I have been trying so hard to write comments to SHUT UP those (especially on Facebook) who don't seem to treat Spider-Man 3 the same way they did with Batman & Robin and Indiana Jones 4, by saying that it was "better than Amazing Spider-Man 1-2", as though it is still canon in the Sam Raimi trilogy even though I don't want it to be (some "happy ending") having watched what the time-traveling does to the X-Men movie continuity affected by the disappointing X-Men 3 in Bryan Singer's Days of Future Past. But I am proud that Spider-Man is "back home" with the Avengers. Can't say the same for the Fantastic Four, unfortunately. I pray that the 2017 Spider-Man reboot (without the origin story this time) will prove me right!
Another one of my favorite 2015 moments was going on two Artsbus trips with my mom (along with dad this November) to the Washington, D.C. area. I registered these two Artsbus classes for my fall semester, despite not being graded with As or Bs. It was however a fun experience for me during my time at George Mason while dealing with designing magazines, making motion design videos, and discussing art subjects in aesthetics class. Some of my favorite artworks I've seen are the ones made by Anselm Kiefer or even paintings by painters such as Henri Matisse and Vincent van Gogh (found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art) as well as the war paintings by Italian artist Alberto Burri in the cylindrical Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (motivated by the On Kawara's Silence video in Prof. McCoy's classroom). Although I was more interested in seeing how these contemporary or antique artworks were greatly designed than learning many of the important facts that I'll sometimes have trouble understanding. It was fun going to the museums with just my mom or with mom and dad together.


But my biggest moment in 2015 of all, was getting to see my younger sister Christine Mayuga come back from Notre Dame University (since last August) during each and every holiday weekend. Just like the very touching moment for Riley and her mom and dad in the Inside Out movie, I will not forget how much of a family we truly are despite getting into a lot of fights and suffering from horrible coughing. And watching that Pixar movie with a very original concept since Up reminded me just how much I miss my childhood days when we're not always dealing with a lot of "important" work and that not every movie relies on too much sequels/remakes and "more money" businesses or even TV shows in which cartoons now sadly ended up as nothing more but YouTube parody/poop jokes videos (Teen Titans Go, The Bare Bears, Breadwinners) or "kid-friendly" toy-selling commercials (Avengers Assemble, TMNT 2012 past Season 2-3). No wonder Joy has been trying hard to make Riley be more happy by reliving her favorite moments from Minnesota in a more modern world that always stick with iPhone technology and social networking discussions. Wonder if 2016 will be any better? I hope so. I mean what could happen?

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Quick Review of 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' (SPOILER ALERT!)


"A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away..." Never knew that this day would come after watching the original and prequel trilogies (along with the Clone Wars and Rebels animated shows) on DVDs at least about countless times and remembering the exact scenes that ended up being a lot more memorable than other big franchises like The Lord of the Rings or Harry Potter. But with new heroes, new villains, new droids, and even new vehicles, the Star Wars universe has gotten even bigger the moment Disney bought Lucasfilm 3 years ago after suffering a $200 million loss from the failed sci-fi franchise starter John Carter. The characters that I have already gotten to know prior to my first viewing of The Force Awakens are Rey, Finn, BB-8, Poe Dameron, Captain Phasma, and Kylo Ren. Except that there was SO MANY new characters that, hilariously, I haven't been able to instantly remember the names (minus Supreme Leader Snoke and Maz Kanata) except the main new ones as well as the old! Director J.J. Abrams, whose film credits include Mission: Impossible III, Star Trek and Super 8, has certainly brought back something that made the original Star Wars trilogy the greatest blockbuster movie franchise of all time, by not relying on the overuse of CGI (by using a lot of practical effects, as it should be!) and actually making the dialogue not too cringeworthy like in the prequels. However, I do think that there are some questionable flaws (but not in a hurtful way, mind you) that probably should not have made fans completely nitpicky with when it was supposed to be an amazing return to a very iconic franchise. But at least it wasn't a lousy nostalgic comeback in a disrespectful way like Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull or Terminator Genisys. Though it has a plot that feels kinda familiar with the very first movie that came out nearly 40 years ago and doesn't quite reach the heights of The Empire Strikes Back ("I am your father!"), which I know is the "best Star Wars movie ever."
Now for the spoilers, but those of you who have seen the movie are free to read some things that I learn and what could have been better. The opening scene with the massacre on the Jakku villagers left by the First Order Stormtroopers commanded by Kylo Ren was nothing like the action that I have seen before. Shame that Max von Sydow was killed instantly by Ren after handing over the piece of information of Luke Skywalker's whereabouts to Resistance pilot Poe Dameron. I thought that he would have such a huge role in the movie. Rey, the scavenger with an unknown history except that she was left behind on the planet Jakku. The actress Daisy Ridley playing her is actually very beautiful, way more than Natalie Portman, but it's gonna take some getting used to for a newcomer. Former Stormtrooper Finn, played a young black actor seems to pull it off in a decent way albeit only good at making funny one-liners and acts like he's the young Han Solo hence the attitude. But Kylo Ren, wow, he is definitely the movie villain of 2015 for me! I was surprised to learn that he is actually the son (named "Ben") of Han Solo and Leia Organa, which makes the latter's twin brother Luke his uncle and Darth Vader his "grandfather" hence his obsession with the fallen Jedi/Sith Lord. Love how he gets angry and throws out tantrum by slashing with his deadly and uniquely designed lightsaber, which makes him seemingly more dangerous than the other Sith Lords. I am however shocked that Kylo Ren killed his own father just when Han was about to talk some sense into him. There goes another one of the favorite Star Wars characters that kept the franchise going after Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Vader. May Han Solo be forever missed. Least Harrison Ford had a good run; better than how his return in Indy 4 turned out. Captain Phasma, played by the badass Gwendoline Christie from Game of Thrones, although an intimidating female Stormtrooper captain deserve some more recognition and not be immediately put aside like Boba Fett or Darth Maul. You know, her last scene that includes the trash compactor joke. But we should at least expect to see her again if she's signed up for #8! The lightsaber duel with Kylo Ren was very intense! Never have I seen such brutality, compared to the original/prequel lightsaber duels, as Ren severely wounded Finn before facing off with Rey (who now appears to be Force-sensitive!) holding Anakin/Luke's old Jedi lightsaber! Now to talk about... Luke Skywalker! 'Cept he's an old man like Obi-Wan Kenobi now. However, I would think that his appearance in The Force Awakens could have been more than just a teasing cameo. I wouldn't say that I was "let down" like everyone were from what I heard, but I think it was intended that way since his journey as a Jedi was already completed. But I look forward to see his expanded role in Episode 8 in two years now that we've lost Han Solo!
Having finished my fall semester at George Mason University with an A for aesthetics, an A- for digital printmaking, a B for editorial magazine design and a B+ for motion design, I'm glad that watching the new Star Wars movie was worth it while I still enjoyed the original three a lot more! Even though my parents and my sister are right now having their own problems to deal with after we finished the movie last night. But thank goodness that it wasn't as convoluted or underwhelming like The Phantom Menace or Attack of the Clones! Too bad J.J. Abrams will not be directing the next film, as the last two will instead be directed by Looper's Rian Johnson and Jurassic World's Colin Trevarrow. I do hope that they live up to the latest installment that's already breaking a LOT of box office records and may possibly beat James Cameron's Avatar (the sequel trilogy (too little too late?) may be out starting in Dec 2017) as the highest-grossing movie of all time! May the Force be with us!

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Quick Review of 'The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2'


"Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the 76th Hunger Games." Although not as spectacular as other excellent finale movies like Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Star Wars: Return of the Jedi or The Dark Knight Rises, it still perfectly ended this franchise on a high-note as the Mockingjay book did. What grieves me to learn is that Part 2 of  Mockingjay opened at a very meager weekend opening of $102 million unlike the previous 3 that each opened over $120-150 million. Perhaps the studios shouldn't get all too greedy splitting anything into 2-3 parts that are better off as one single film like The Hobbit should have been as most people say. The overlong padding after each action I think is what made this final film a little underwhelming unlike the 1st two Hunger Games movies which are, in my opinion, the best of the series. What I do love seeing however are the easily-likeable characters like Katniss, Prim, Effie Trinket, Johanna Mason, and Katniss' own beloved Peeta, as well as the most compelling villain (next to Heath Ledger's Joker, Anthony Hopkins' Hannibal Lecter, and Javier Bardem's Raoul Silva) President Snow. I was glad that the madness has finally ended after Mockingjay Part 1 had me in an overwhelming suspense because of Peeta's condition after the District 13 rebels rescued him from the Capitol. The parts that really get me are the poor children, including poor Primrose Everdeen, getting killed by the exploding parachute "gifts" that the Capitol (turns out to be President Coin (Julianne Moore)'s doing), along with Katniss yelling at the cat Buttercup to get out before goin in an emotional breakdown and when Haymitch reads out the letter to Katniss from Plutarch Heavensbee, the late Oscar-winning Philip Seymour Hoffman, which are pretty much his last words before the said actor's death. During the execution scene, I knew this was coming all along From what I read in the book where Katniss instead shot an arrow at Coin rather than Snow since he is already dying anyway. By the time all of the chaotic action is over, the best part that was worth it is when Katniss and Peeta finally get together again when they lay together on a bed like most beautiful couples always do ("Real or not real?" "Real"). And once the epilogue scene begins, it was like the most emotional scene I've ever seen, watching how cute the children that both Kat and Peet have years later and knowing that this is Jennifer Lawrence's big farewell to her Katniss Everdeen character. When the credits roll, her song ("Deep in the meadow...") can be heard which is an excellent way of making the Hunger Games franchise end with a bang. No other follow-up, whether sequel or prequel, is gonna be able to top everything since Mockingjay is to me the END of the most violent Hunger Games events ever occurred. Not even the Divergent or the Maze Runner movies are gonna be able to top the action and suspense that the Suzanne Collins book-made-into-movies have. I really hope that my Mockingjay Part 2 experience is worth it despite not doing so much of a bigger box office success it deserves to be like most other 2015 sequels (somethin that isn't Jurassic World, Pitch Perfect 2, Hotel Transylvania 2, or even next month's Star Wars: The Force Awakens) that fail to top their otherwise superior predecessors. May the odds be still in our favor.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

15 Successful Movies That Were Considered "Failures"

Seriously, when is a movie that was able to earn enough more money than expected (thus, earning back almost their entire budget!) is ever declared a "huge financial failure"? Name one! Also, check again (namely Stealth, 47 Ronin, Final Fantasy, etc.)! That includes you, Disney (calling Avengers: Age of Ultron's $1.4 billion record a "failure")!


1. Man of Steel (2013)
Box Office: $668,045,518
Budget: $225 million




2. Batman Returns (1992)
Box Office: $266,822,354
Budget: $80 million





3. Rise of the Guardians (2012)
Box Office: $306,941,670
Budget: $145 million





4. Penguins of Madagascar (2014)
Box Office: $373,552,094
Budget: $132 million





5. The Golden Compass (2007)
Box Office: $372,234,864
Budget: $180 million





6. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)
Box Office: $708,982,323
Budget: $200-255 million





7. Turbo (2013)
Box Office: $282,570,682
Budget: $135 million





8. The Smurfs 2 (2013)
Box Office: $347,545,360
Budget: $105 million





9. The Counselor (2013)
Box Office: $71,009,334
Budget: $25 million





10. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011)
Box Office: $232,617,430
Budget: $90 million





11. Paranormal Activity 4 (2012)
Box Office: $142,817,992
Budget: $5 million





12. The Hangover Part III (2013)
Box Office: $362,000,072
Budget: $103 million





13. Johnny English Reborn (2011)
Box Office: $160,078,586
Budget: $45 million





14. The Matrix Revolutions (2003)
Box Office: $427,343,298
Budget: $150 million





15. The Chronicles of Narnia: 
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (2010)
Box Office: $415,686,217
Budget: $155 million

Thursday, August 27, 2015

My Favorite Summer Movies of 2015


My Top 10 favorite movies of Summer 2015:

1. Jurassic World - 71% (CinemaScore: A)
2. Ant-Man - 82% (CinemaScore: A)
3. Avengers: Age of Ultron - 75% (CinemaScore: A)
4. Inside Out - 98% (CinemaScore: A)
5. Minions - 56% (CinemaScore: A)
6. Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation - 93% (CinemaScore: A-)
7. Mad Max: Fury Road - 97% (CinemaScore: B+)
8. Pitch Perfect 2 - 65% (CinemaScore: A-)
9. Pixels - 18% (CinemaScore: B)
10. Terminator Genisys - 26% (CinemaScore: B+)


Note: These percentages indicate how positive the critical reviews are, according to rottentomatoes.com. To learn more about CinemaScore, enter http://www.cinemascore.com/.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Is It Too Late for the Sequel to Fox's 2015 Fantastic FLOP?


"Everything I've heard would indicate that the studio will move forward with a 'Fantastic Four' sequel. It may not make that original 2017 date, but they're definitely planning to make it." Uh, hate to break it to ya, Mr. Chris Aronson, but isn't it a little late for an UNFantastic Four sequel to this year's reboot that sadly FLOPPED -- both critically AND financially!? Why immediately make a sequel to a movie that is already about to have a $60 million write-off? That's like making a sequel to either Disney's John Carter ($284 m on a $250 m budget) or Warner Bros.' Battlefield Earth ($29.7 m on a $73 m budget), both of which are huge critical/box office failures! I mean, come on! While the movie is simply bad because of the behind-the-scenes fiasco and how director Josh Trank feels toward his experience filming it, it still doesn't change how unimpressed I am with his vision of the dark and gloomy take on "Marvel's First Family" that deserves a much better movie treatment (the only proper FF movie for me is Disney/Pixar's Oscar-winning animated film The Incredibles) after the total disappointment that is 2007's FF: Rise of the Silver Surfer. Even if Fox believes that they are "forever committed" to the Fantastic Four lore, too bad it's gonna suffer the same fate as Sony's The Amazing Spider-Man 2 did (hence why we're no longer getting an Amazing Spider-Man 3 as planned). I'm sorry, but there is no "second chance" to develop another mediocre "Fantastic" Four movie even with "lessons learned" from such an awful attempt with a rehashable dark and gritty concept for most particular reboots. Neither is there any possibility that the yet-to-be-made/not made sequel will "redeem" the FF image. Don't see how you have any better ideas to retain the FF franchise as long as they have with X-Men. You can try something like putting the Fantastic Four in one of the X-Men movies like you've always wanted, but it's still uncertain if it's really gonna change our minds about how we feel towards the superheroes that can stretch, turn invisible, create fire, and clobbering stuff. That's why I signed in the petition to hopefully get you Fox studio execs through your thick skulls to just GIVE THE FANTASTIC FOUR BACK TO MARVEL already! And you had better hurry and reconsider the June 9th, 2017 date that you somehow made for the sequel BEFORE the 2015 movie even came out, because it will surely get clobbered (literally) at the box office big time by the likes of Star Wars: Episode VIII, Wonder Woman, Toy Story 4, and World War Z 2! But I will gladly wait for the Deadpool sequel ('pends if the 1st is a hit next February) to achieve that date!

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Quick (but LONG) Review of 2015's 'Fantastic Four'


My worst fears have come true. This reboot truly is DOOMED. "Change is coming"? Give me a break. You think that after we were unsatisfied with the two Fantastic Four movies from 2005 to 2007, there would have been some miracle with the super-powered foursome. Shame that it couldn't live up to the REAL superhero blockbusters of 2015: Avengers: Age of Ultron and Ant-Man. As much as found-footage superhero movie Chronicle was such a breakout hit in early 2012, Josh Trank's vision for a "David Croenenberg sci-fi horror type" of a superhero movie unfortunately didn't quite work for the more colorful heroes that can stretch, turn invisible, burst into flames, and get rocky or strong. The overall tone shouldn't be all dark and somber just because it "worked" in other fresher reboots since Batman Begins. It kinda makes the Fantastic Four lack any joyfulness and any feel that it's fun being a superhero! The flatlined, dreary atmosphere makes this 2015 reboot like Hulk 2003/Green Lantern 2011 bad when there is like too much quietness and all of that! But wait! Not only was the tone completely off for the team that should get along pretty well with the Avengers, the movie feels a bit... incomplete. It's no wonder the pacing is a bit completely forced the moment it shows the "one year later" caption. It has TOO MANY SCENES CUT OUT that would have properly developed the characters and the story! This is exactly what happened with The Last Airbender and Priest! You don't make the movies so abruptly short when they could have worked better as 2-hour long movies to provide a more coherent story! The third act of course could have had some proper changes to make it less anti-climatic! Guess that would explain the complications between Josh Trank and the studio when the reshoots were made. Was kinda hopin to see the Fantastic Four don their blue costumes like Miles Teller promised us! Ah. Guess he must've lied. Still want Ben/Thing to wear pants so that we don't mock his "nakedness". I highly recommend the Ultimate Fantastic Four comics, which the FAILED reboot was based on, more than what was brought to life on the big screen! Least they had a story despite the so-so illustrative comic book designs.

For the overall cast, they seemed pretty decent. But sadly, not for the four main characters. Miles Teller acts like he's not a worthy leader of the Fantastic Four. Since when did he just run off and then not come back to his friends after for a year just because the powers they were bestowed with are a "disease" to them? That should have been Ben Grimm's! And he calls himself "Mr. Fantastic". For the young Reed Richards, other than being scornfully dismissed by the teacher (voice of Homer Simpson, everybody!), I think there should have been more of those scenes where we see how he was treated by his father after trying out the interdimensional transporter prototype in the garage (like in the 1st Ultimate F4 comic book issue). Those of you who hated Ioan Gruffudd's REAL Mr. Fantastic (blame the mediocre script for the poor acting or the outdated stretching effects!) should reconsider their opinions! Kate Mara, prettier than she looks compared to her sister Rooney Mara or former Invisible Woman star (sex symbol is more like it) Jessica Alba, looked like she should've been promoted as Fantastic Four leader because of how bold she acts in her following scenes after receiving her invisibility/force field powers. And here is what I now call my least favorite F4 character of this so-called "superior reboot": Michael B. Jordan. No offense to non-racist purists, but I like Johnny Storm better when he is white, which truly makes it look like that Sue and Johnny ARE brother and sister, adopted or no! Making the Human Torch (name not said onscreen sadly) a black person feels completely... forced. He apparently lacked the hot shot maverick attitude that makes us like him more unlike how we feel towards Chris Evans, the REAL Human Torch. And one minute, he was feeling devastated as his newfound ability to go all flame on, then later he just immediately goes along with it like it was no problem. Completely forced. The "sibling" chemistry between Kate Mara and Michael Jordan (not the basketball player) doesn't strike me that they are related! Just like M Jordan doesn't appear to have a positive father-son bond with the monotone-voiced Dr. Franklin Storm, ANOTHER white character played by an "excellent" black actor! Again, it feels very forced unlike Michael Clarke Duncan's Kingpin, Idris Elba's Heimdall, and Kerry Washington's Alicia Masters! Reg E. Cathey, a good actor as he is, seems better off as a separate character specifically made for the movie. He may be a respectful (adoptive) father to Kate Mara's Sue Storm, but it's too bad that the way he speaks is not how I picture the REAL Dr. Franklin Storm in the comics, who I know cares so much of both Sue and Johnny. I feel like Jared Harris would have been a better Dr. Franklin Storm if Johnny Storm is changed back to white! And with him dead, there goes our only chance to see more of Cathey's Dr. Storm supporting the Fantastic Four along the way like his comic book counterpart does in the Ultimate comics! Among the quartet, Jamie Bell I feel deserve better! He feels like he's not part of the movie the way there is too much focus on Miles, Kate, Michael, and Toby in a few scenes prior to the interdimensional transportation experiment gone wrong part. I was so looking forward to more the Thing clobbering part, but instead of the said clobbering part that I was promised by the trailers, they were sadly only seen in the military footage after the abrupt "1 year later" transition. SERIOUSLY! With the excellent and more realistic motion-capture CGI on the Thing (in my opinion, way better than the obviously fake Thing makeup and costume worn by Michael Chiklis), there would have been a nice character arc for us to see Ben Grimm feeling tragic with his rocky form. And last but not least, Toby Kebbell as Dr. Doom. He is the one character I feel that Fox is NOT doing him justice besides Galactus! While he was not who I imagined him to be, least he was a lot more scary than the weak and miscast Julian McMahon. But I believe that this whole once-friend-now-enemy thing is getting old. He doesn't need to always be friends with the Fantastic Four and then get involved in their origin that involves them receiving their powers for the first time! Doesn't Fox understand that Doom is supposed to be the RULER OF LATVERIA instead of a young Latverian computer technician, once beloved by Dr. Franklin Storm, and having a crush on Susan Storm!? Then by the time he was brought back as the archenemy of the Fantastic Four that we know, his transition to a villain is obviously rushed without any buildup. And his evil motivations need to be much more clearer for us to admire him. Even if Dr. Doom was able to put up a fight with the four heroes unlike what Julian McMahon is SO BAD AT, he is unfortunately taken out too quickly! Come on Fox! You can't just introduce our favorite F4 villain and then kill him off immediately when there could have been at least some indication that should leave it open for his possible return as he is the most recurring villain of the Fantastic Four comics! This is exactly why Dr. Doom is better off in Marvel's hands if the Disney XD Ultimate Spider-Man/Avengers Assemble cartoons were able to use him!


And since this week's Fantastic Four failed to achieve the desired box office results like the studio had hoped, this is starting to feel like The Amazing Spider-Man 2 all over again. Maybe it was a bad idea to slate the June 2017 date for their yet-to-be-made sequel before the movie even came out this month! Despite Josh Trank wanting to make a "more edgier and grounded science fiction horror" Fantastic Four film, apparently his direction just doesn't satisfy us comic book fans. Regardless of his "unusual behavior" towards Fox for "meddling" with the movie based on his promising vision. Those of you who want Marvel's First Family to come back to the Marvel Cinematic Universe should hear this: Fox domestic distribution chief Chris Aronson had this to say about these numbers: "While we're disappointed, we remain committed to these characters and we have a lot to look forward to in our Marvel universe." I'm sorry, what? Fox still wants to keep the Fantastic Four rights until the end of time no matter how disappointing their F4 movies are becoming!!? Uh uh! Don't think so! If the movie bombs, then there shouldn't be a sequel coming already! How about make the same kind of deal with Marvel that Sony made to allow Spider-Man join the Avengers while the former retains control over him! Forget mixing the freakish X-Men mutants and the well-loved Fantastic Four together in one big movie! Once Fox had done so, Marvel could finally do the Fantastic Four, Dr. Doom, Silver Surfer, and Galactus done justice! The studio heads at Twentieth Century Fox should change their minds about permanently keeping the FF team away from Marvel!

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

My Reaction to the New Deadpool Movie Trailer


I've got to say, this is what us fans have been begging Fox to make a Deadpool movie to wipe away the tainted memory that is Weapon XI (who doesn't deserve Deadpool's name) in X-Men Origins: Wolverine and yet for once, the studio finally got it right after the X-Men franchise was saved by last summer's Days of Future Past. Guess the highly-praised reception to the test footage at Comic-con really paid off! It looks like Deadpool will be Ryan Reynolds' first excellent comic book movie after flops like Blade: Trinity, Green Lantern, and R.I.P.D. All of this blood and gore (hopefully, my dad's ok with it) among the violent action in this "vulgar comedy" is just what we expect in Deadpool which harkens back to the part where Hit-Girl kills all of the bad guys in the apartment in the 1st Kick-Ass movie. I'm glad that it's actually going to be rated R instead of the watered down PG-13 rating which didn't work so well with the first Wolverine spin-off that was supposed to define what makes Wolverine a savage mutant. Thought that everything Ryan Reynolds says (including the Green Lantern reference) is pretty funny, as though the script was made by Deadpool fans. But is it just me, or was Colossus IN this Deadpool movie? Only he looks more comic book accurate than he was in X-Men 2-3 & DOFP. Not sure what his purpose was besides being the main connection point that Deadpool is "set in the X-Men universe", but it's great seeing that the big Russian metal-skinned mutant is getting the recognition he deserves! This'll no doubt make a lot of money like how Kingsman: The Secret Service earned over $400 million even for an R-rated comic book film since there's like a LOT of fans who love Deadpool in the Marvel comics. I am absolutely ready for 2016, and this Merc with the Mouth flick is among my anticipated films I look forward to see besides Captain America: Civil War and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice!

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Quick Review of 'Ant-Man'



I have to say, I'm actually impressed with this latest Ant-Man movie! Better than my viewing with Avengers: Age of Ultron (not a bad movie, though) in my opinion! Just like last summer's Guardians of the Galaxy, Ant-Man has proven to be a very entertaining non-Avenger Marvel movie even with a strange concept of a hero who can shrink himself the size of an ant and battle enemies with the horde of ants at his command! And it looks like that it turned to be a pretty good film even without Edgar Wright as their director! I never knew that Paul Rudd, as the goofball master criminal thief Scott Lang, could really pull it off as our new Ant-Man even though Hank Pym, played by Michael Douglas, should have been the main Ant-Man like he was in the comics. But Scott's daughter Cassie Lang is just the CUTEST THING I see in Ant-Man! "Daddy, is that you?" Awww.
Every time I see young Hank Pym in the flashbacks, makes me wish that Marvel would at least consider making a prequel about how he first developed the Pym Particles and his discovery on the "Quantum Realm" (or the Microverse), and see more of the partnership/relationship between the original Ant-Man and the Wasp, A.K.A. Janet van Dyne (on screen together for the first time even for just a few minutes)! Though I was a bit sad to see what happen to poor Jan when she sacrificed her life to save Hank while sabotaging the Soviet rocket. But because Scott was able to survive being in the Quantum Realm for so long after defeating Yellowjacket, I was relieved to learn that Jan may in fact be still alive. Now that, I would love to see the original Wasp (perhaps Catherine Zeta-Jones, married to Michael Douglas in real life, can play her) again or witness Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly), Hank & Janet's daughter, in action as the new Wasp!
Michael Peña of course is the one actor who absolutely STOLE THE MOVIE. He makes me laugh SO HARD everytime he says some hilarious stuff that don't make sense but nonetheless nailed it without taking it too serious! Gotta give thanks to Paul Rudd, Adam Mackay and Edgar Wright for giving the humorous feel to the script that was rewritten a couple of times ever since Bring It On director Peyton Reed came in to helm what almost became "Marvel's first flop"! I thought it was pretty funny the way that everytime we see Ant-Man and Yellowjacket fight, we would see them from our normal size perspective like it wasn't as loud or violent when they're pretty tiny as though they are harmless insects. Love the Thomas the Tank Engine gag, though! Hahahaha!
I sure hope that because of the excellent word-of-mouth, there may have to be plans of telling more of the story of Ant-Man despite his sequel not among the line of Phase 3 movies. With the post-credits scene, I am so pumped up for next May's Captain America: Civil War, the start of Phase 3 (with all the films leading up to the Russo Brothers' Avengers: Infinity War)!

Friday, July 24, 2015

Finished My English Online Course at Summer Semester!



This week has been pretty lucky for me! Last night, I finally submitted my last and final English 302 assignment via GMU Blackboard website! After weeks of challenging essays and lectures during the course of this summer semester, I am so happy to have completed my written papers! I should thank mom and my sister Christine for all the help they have given me! Thank you Prof. Dean Taciuch for being a respectful online teacher for us English students! Moving on to the next semester after weeks of a relaxing summer!

Monday, May 11, 2015

Quick Review of 'Hulk'


In Nick Nolte's words, "Take it back! It's not stopping! Take it back!" That's right, TAKE THIS MOVIE BACK FROM US! I don't care what these sissy YouTubers think of 2003's Hulk being "better than The Incredible Hulk," but it is SO BORING, SO DULL AND WAY TOO LONG!!!
Ang Lee may have been a good director for hits like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Life of Pi, but he's just not the right director for the giant green-ragin behemoth. As much as we think that the psychological plot of Bruce/Hulk's anger is "important to the character," it's too bad that Ang Lee delved into it too deeply in a convoluted way! THERE WAS JUST NOT ENOUGH EXCITING ACTION! I hate it when the Hulk fights main bad guys at night (like the badly-CGI Hulk-Dogs) with NO LIGHTING! They were just too dark and hard to tell the good and bad guys apart! No wonder it failed to domestically earn back the $137 million budget after achieving a B- CinemaScore grade from audiences more than 10 years ago! The pacing is so slow and there was just TOO MUCH POINTLESSLY-LONG QUIET CONVERSATIONS! And what's worse, the comic book-style transitioning is TOO DISTRACTING throughout the entire 2-hr long film! I know Ang Lee is trying to make it a "comic book movie," but it only became ridiculously stale and ruins the pacing and flow of every scene in a stupid way.
"Stronger than 2008/Avengers Hulk" or not, but the CGI on this 2003 version of the Hulk, or "Shrulk", is just so fake and too smoothly-detailed or fat to make him look like a fearful green monster! He also didn't say "Hulk Smash!" other than "Puny human" and "TAKE IT ALLLLL!!!!" Don't blame how "weak" Ed Norton's Hulk (way more realistic and better-detailed!) was handled in the reboot when maybe it was just done to ensure that he isn't too "overpowered"! And that the Abomination (Tim Roth), who was much stronger than the Hulk in the comics, will have a chance to initially overwhelm him before Hulk would gain the upper hand in the end. People should know that at least his strength has gotten better in 2012's The Avengers since he's the same Hulk (but different actor) from his own solo Hulk reboot! Eric Bana is just too monotone and emotionless for us to sympathize with, nor does he even act like a scientist who runs gamma radiation tests. For he is clearly the one who's a lot more angry than the Hulk since he doesn't seem to be worried or desperate enough about preventing himself from endangering everyone like he does in the comics. All of the characters, other than <3 Jennifer Connelly <3 (although her face can be at times too wooden like Kristen Stewart's), are so unlikeable! Especially Josh Lucas as douchebag Glenn Talbot, who clearly does not act like a real major but more of a stalker of Betty Ross (unlike his FAR SUPERIOR Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. counterpart) and has the worst yet hilarious death scene ever! While Sam Elliott (also appeared in Ghost Rider) did good as General "T-Bolt" Ross, William Hurt's reason of his hatred towards Bruce/Hulk made a lot more sense than simply hating him for being the son of David Banner. Speaking of whom, Nick Nolte's insane father of Bruce Banner unfortunately is the character I do not care about! I don't care about his ties to the Hulk's origins (nanomeds and genetic blah blah blah kind of stuff) for the sake of developing more of the "anger issues"! His motivations and his obsessive experimentations on starfishes, reptiles and monkeys didn't quite make sense to me. And his acting became over-the-top once he goes crazy with all the yelling (Bruce's GOOOOOOOOO!!!!! included) and his subtle mock yelling! I don't think that he was an inspiring Hulk villain once he was turned into Absorbing Man (Carl Creel from the comics and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) or whatever when he absorb things like electricity (Zzzax-style), rock and water before turning into a giant gamma cloud! Now that is just plain weird.
Overall... THE CAST IS A HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT! Can't people who "didn't enjoy Incredible Hulk" not understand that!!?? I'm glad that Marvel and Universal rebooted the Hulk franchise with a movie that strongly ties to the Avengers! I could almost imagine the disappointing reactions from the Avengers stars like Robert Downey, Jr. and especially Mark Ruffalo when they see this not-so-incredible Hulk film! You don't need the serious tone, then take it too far, to make a Hulk movie! What really defines the Hulk is a perfect balance of fun-filled comic book action and tragic (but not too tragic!) suspenseful thriller to make it more faithful to the cheerful tones of Iron Man, Captain America, and Spider-Man! So don't bother seeing Hulk and then next seeing The Incredible Hulk (a total reboot, not a direct continuation) even if they're 5 years apart from each other. Bruce saving Harper from gamma exposure is not enough to make the audience be first introduced to how the Hulk came to be for the first time on the big screen thanks to a very FLAT-written script made for Ang Lee.
Like Spider-Man 3, the well-composed soundtrack (by Spider-Man 1-2 composer Danny Elfman) and the "excellent" action scenes (the tank and helicopter desert scenes until the abruptly-short San Francisco rampage, and the South America ending) does not outweigh the negative flaws that were frequently found! No matter how many times I view this on DVD, the end result remains to be the same disappointing mess that I already know. This 2003 Hulk adaptation does NOT deserve a much bigger praise than the more comic book-faithful Incredible Hulk, which is officially canon in the Marvel Cinematic Universe with no disregard even with a so-so $263 million worldwide gross! And don't even think about making me angry with your positive comments saying that the Ang Lee movie has a "better story than in the 08 reboot"! Because you wouldn't like me when I'm VERY angry.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Quick Review of 'Avengers: Age of Ultron'


Now THIS is how you start the summer movie season with a bang! Not like what Iron Man 3 and The Amazing Spider-Man 2 failed to do after 2012's The Avengers! Don't understand what with all the comments are saying that it was such a "big disappointment"? I thought it was JUST AS GOOD AS THE PREDECESSOR! Much better than even Iron Man 2-3 and Thor 2! Ultron is a much more dangerous villain than even Loki, Aldrich Killian, Malekith, Ivan Vanko/Whiplash, and Ronan! As always, the chemistry between these Avengers (Robert Downey, Jr. Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth and, Mark Ruffalo) is just perfect and has a nice touch with the sense of humor than in the 1st! But the most best of all is that Jeremy Renner has a much bigger role, expanded character development, and clearly stole the scenes that involves him making hilarious sarcastic jokes, just the way his Hawkeye character needed to be after being a mindless slave to Loki during the 1st hour before the Battle of New York! James Spader, I thought, is very intimidating as the cold-calculative sentient robot Ultron who wants to "bring peace" to the world. Love how he brings up like the concept of Noah's Ark when explaining the whole human extinction plot. And the way that he creepily sings the "There Are No Strings On Me" song from Disney's Pinocchio as though it was inspiration on his belief that no one, especially Tony, can control Ultron. Just what I've been expecting to hear from him after viewing the first trailer last year. What also makes Ultron an even bigger threat to the Avengers is that rather than destroying them quickly, he tends to use the Maximoff twins Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch to "tear them apart" by building up even greater tensions among the team. Now THAT was an evil scheme than what Loki had planned! While I still enjoyed the Avengers' fight with the Chitauri aliens a lot more, love that there was a much bigger suspense that involves the Avengers making tough decisions of how to save the city of Sokovia without resulting in multiple human casualties (which happened before in Man of Steel) before next thing they know… the S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier arrives with Nick Fury at their command and WAR MACHINE (not Iron Patriot, this time!) as their backup! But the saddest thing that's eve happened before Ultron's defeat by Scarlet Witch and Vision's hands was the death of… Quicksilver, who gave his life saving Hawkeye and the poor helpless kid. So I'm intrigued to see how Wanda/Scarlet Witch will cope with her twin brother's death in the next upcoming films.
So it looks like we now have a new set of Avengers after Iron Man and Hawkeye left the team, Thor heading back to Asgard to seek answers on the Infinity Stones, and the Hulk banishing himself to space piloting a Quinjet (maybe even encountering the Guardians of the Galaxy - Planet Hulk-style!). Captain America (my favorite Avenger) and Black Widow are still with us, but joining the New Avengers are: War Machine, Falcon, Vision, and Scarlet Witch! Though I hate how just after Cap says "Avengers..", I was kinda expecting him to say "assemble" before next thing I know, the end credits roll. During the mid-credits scene however, an Infinity Gauntlet (without the 6 stones) can be seen being wielded by Thanos while declaring "Fine. I'll do it myself". This had me excited to see how the Avengers can deal with what might be the "best MCU villain of all time" in AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR (Pt 1 in 2018, and Pt 2 in 2019)! This was like the greatest Marvel movie experience I've ever had this year! The Fantastic Four reboot (good or not) will have a tough time impressing us with the questionable casting even with better effects and a "perfect tone"! I'm more excited to see one more Phase 2 movie Ant-Man! Keep it going Marvel! 'Cause I am ready!

Sunday, February 22, 2015

The 2015 Academy Award Winners!

The winners of my "favorite categories" at the 87th Academy Awards ceremony from last night are...!


Best Picture
  • American Sniper
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Boyhood
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • The Imitation Game
  • Selma
  • The Theory of Everything
  • Whiplash


Best Director
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Alejandro G. Iñárritu)
  • Boyhood (Richard Linklater)
  • Foxcatcher (Bennett Miller)
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel (Wes Anderson)
  • The Imitation Game (Morten Tyldum)

Best Actor
  • Foxcatcher (Steve Carrell)
  • American Sniper (Bradley Cooper)
  • The Imitation Game (Benedict Cumberbatch)
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Michael Keaton)
  • The Theory of Everything (Eddie Redmayne)

Best Actress
  • Two Days, One Night (Marion Cotillard)
  • The Theory of Everything (Felicity Jones)
  • Still Alice (Julianne Moore)
  • Gone Girl (Rosamund Pike)
  • Wild (Reese Witherspoon)

Best Supporting Actor
  • The Judge (Robert Duvall)
  • Boyhood (Ethan Hawke)
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Edward Norton)
  • Foxcatcher (Mark Ruffalo)
  • Whiplash (J.K. Simmons)

Best Supporting Actress
  • Boyhood (Patricia Arquette)
  • Wild (Laura Dern)
  • The Imitation Game (Keira Knightley)
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Emma Stone)
  • Into the Woods (Meryl Streep)

Best Original Screenplay
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Boyhood
  • Foxcatcher
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • Nightcrawler

Best Adapted Screenplay
  • American Sniper
  • The Imitation Game
  • Inherent Vice
  • The Theory of Everything
  • Whiplash

Best Animated Feature
  • Big Hero 6 (Don Hall and Chris Williams)
  • The Boxtrolls (Anthony Stacchi and Graham Annable)
  • How to Train Your Dragon 2 (Dean DeBlois)
  • Song of the Sea (Tomm Moore)
  • The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (Isao Takahata)

Best Production Design
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • The Imitation Game
  • Interstellar
  • Into the Woods
  • Mr. Turner

Best Costume Design
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • Inherent Vice
  • Into the Woods
  • Maleficent
  • Mr. Turner

Best Cinematography
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • Ida
  • Mr. Turner
  • Unbroken

Best Film Editing
  • American Sniper
  • Boyhood
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • The Imitation Game
  • Whiplash

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
  • Foxcatcher
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel
  • Guardians of the Galaxy

Best Original Score
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel (Alexandre Desplat)
  • The Imitation Game (Alexandre Desplat)
  • Interstellar (Hans Zimmer)
  • Mr. Turner (Gary Yershon)
  • The Theory of Everything (Jóhann Jóhannsson)

Best Original Song
  • The LEGO Movie ("Everything Is Awesome")
  • Selma ("Glory")
  • Beyond the Lights ("Grateful")
  • Glen Campbell...I'll Be Me ("I'm Not Gonna Miss You")
  • Begin Again ("Lost Stars")

Best Visual Effects
  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier
  • Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
  • Guardians of the Galaxy
  • Interstellar
  • X-Men: Days of Future Past

Best Sound Mixing
  • American Sniper
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • Interstellar
  • Unbroken
  • Whiplash

Best Sound Editing
  • American Sniper
  • Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
  • The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
  • Interstellar
  • Unbroken