#Supergirl is a “super-horrendous” comic book movie “with the worst script I can remember,” reads Variety’s review from @OwenGleiberman.
James Gunn said he wasn’t going into production on any movie until the script was rock-solid. For that was the overriding problem with the superhero overkill era: the films had lousy scripts, which served as grids for layering visual effects.
Gunn was right to want to take the comic-book genre back to the basics of well-structured screenwriting. So what has he done in his second DC outing? He’s given us a comic-book movie with the worst script I can remember.
https://t.co/La1XDYk3zT
@RepJackKimble@clarencehilljr So y’all are just idiots in congress, fake and not even real… understood. Thanks for the warning, sucks that you feel what your constituents feel, but your paychecks keep coming, you just want more money to illegally trade with.
"Pulp Fiction" actress Rosanna Arquette says Quentin Tarantino has a “hall pass” to use the N-word in his films, which she thinks is “racist and creepy":
“It’s iconic, a great film on a lot of levels,” Arquette said of “Pulp Fiction.” “But personally I am over the use of the N-word — I hate it. I cannot stand that he [Tarantino] has been given a hall pass. It’s not art, it’s just racist and creepy.”
https://t.co/qD3wOVrDd0