[School of Movies 2021]
Militarized slaves are sent to an island to clean up a violent mess with plausible deniability. An instant hit with both audiences and critics on release, this 2021 film is the realization of the John Ostrander-era of the Suicide Squad/Task Force X concept that actually first appeared as far back as 1959 (prior to Marvel's Silver Age of The Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and The Avengers.
And yet it faltered at the box office, due to several reasons. Being R-rated in the middle of a pandemic, the sour taste of the 2016 David Ayer film, the absence of Joker and let's not discount an abundance of dark superhero satire in TV and movies, which this feels like. By all rights, fans of The Boys and Invincible should have turned up in droves, and yet that association may have worked against the film in the end.
This episode is simply me telling Sharon about the experience of watching the film in the cinema for the first time, augmented by further thoughts as I mulled it over in the interim days. It was a mixed bag for me, with strong elements sat side by side with things I've seen done better elsewhere.
WandaVision
Hades
Kung Fu Hustle
Grease
-Ali-
The Adventures of Priscilla: Queen of the Desert
Bill & Ted Face the Music
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure
Wonder Woman 1984
Super 8
Super Mario Bros.
Cannon's Ninja Trilogy
Ready Player One
The Adventures of Tintin & The BFG
Brotherhood of the Wolf
Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Catch Me if You Can
10 Possible Futures
Deep Impact vs. Armageddon
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Cinema: A to B
I Finally Watched...
Star Wars Escape Pod
Pop Culture Happy Hour
Pod Meets World