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Josh has come along way since Goonies
He has indeed,he will outdo his dad soon.
He is actually going to be James Bond ? ;) (sorry it’s really all I know his dad from)
Hahaha God no,and praise be that his dad didn't either !!.
His dad was in Westworld,Capricorn One , Traffic , Amityville Horror (original), films like that.
I really like him- I hope he never goes the 'Lindsay Lohan' route, lol. It's refreshing to see a young talented actor who seems to generally be a nice down to earth guy
They already did
A new Netflix version of Blade and Dracula is long overdue.
Is that a partner to 'Navel' ?
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www.hollywoodreporter.com/amp/heat-vision/james-gunn-billboard-asks-disney-rehire-him-guardians-3-1156340
A for effort though thats money not very well spent.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/stan-lee-marvel-comics-legend-721450
Sad day for the comicbook world. I'm glad he got to see his characters come to life so successfully though.
Worse : No more Stan Lee cameos. :(
Sad, sad news :(
- Untitled Sony/Marvel project on July 10 (most likely Morbius directed by Daniel Espinosa & starring Jared Leto).
- Untitled Sony/Marvel Sequel on October 2 (most likely Venom 2).
https://www.thewrap.com/sony-two-marvel-projects-2020/
Never heard of Travis Knight, What has he done?
He directed this:
Bumblebee is his 2nd project as director.
That’s almost a metaphor for how Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse fits into the web of 2018 Spider-Media. In a wide field of Spider-Mans to choose from, it is the strength of Miles Morales’ story that makes him a standout character. And Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse has plenty of strengths to go around.
With its risky visual storytelling and tender script, Into the Spider-Verse earns the greatest honor that one can bestow on a Spider-Man movie: It somehow makes you want to see more Spider-Man movies. Including at least a few more for Miles Morales alone.
Spider-Verse not only returns Spider-Man to his comic-book roots, but reinstates that fundamental idea. In this telling of the story, it truly could be anyone behind that mask — a little girl, a grizzled detective, a middle-aged sad sack, maybe even another unassuming New York kid — and all the people wearing it are better together than they are apart.
“Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” represents some of the best superhero storytelling on the market. The frenetic animation and freewheeling story offer audiences a sense of boundless dynamism. It’s not the first time a director has attempted to incorporate comic book iconography into a feature-film adaptation — see also: Ang Lee’s “Hulk” and Edgar Wright’s “Scott Pilgrim vs. The World” — but it’s the most appealing. Watching “Into the Spider-Verse” evokes feelings of sitting cross-legged on the floor of your bedroom, eating cookies and immersing yourself in outrageous, mostly inviting new worlds.
the brilliance of Sony’s snappy new animated “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” shows itself in the project’s uncanny ability to simultaneously reset and expand all that has come before, creating an inclusive world where pretty much anybody can be the superhero … even you!
There will almost certainly be more to be heard from this group of hipster crime fighters, who here have begun to carve out a fertile new neighborhood both in Brooklyn and the Marvel-Verse.
It may seem a bit saccharine, typed out in so many words, but it's a message that superhero comics--that Spider-Man comics specifically--have been touting for ages, and something that's been long overdue for a big screen debut. It probably wouldn't work if Into The Spider-Verse weren't just so funny, self aware, and bleeding-edge modern--but it is, and it does. It manages to blow right past the dangers of sinking into after school special territory by believing wholeheartedly in its own message and delivering it with appropriately genuine stakes. The end result is an instant animated classic, and, with any luck, the first of many of its kind.
While on paper it might seem like a shameless cash grab, this latest take on the webslinger is a thrilling, witty and surprisingly necessary chapter in the franchise
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is incredibly exciting because it eschews all of that. It’s innovative, irreverent, and dynamic. It’s hilarious but exceptionally earnest, with a lead character worth caring about. It’s the kind of cinematic ride that invites more franchise installments — not just to learn more about the many, many characters it introduces and worlds it hints at, but just to see how Miles Morales’ Spider-Man will grow and change.