Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths – Part One Movie Review Rating:
Star Cast: Alexandra Daddario, Aldis Hodge, Matt Bomer, Jensen Ackles, Stana Katic, Jimmi Simpson
Director: Jeff Wamester
Director: Marv Wolfman, James Krieg
Review of Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths – Part One: A Disappointing Start to Crisis (Photo Credit – IMDb)
What’s Good: The voice cast, including Matt Bomer, Ashleigh Lathrop, and Christopher North, delivers performances on par with previous entries in the franchise. Bomer’s earnest portrayal of The Flash echoes the character’s Silver Age origins, while Lathrop and North contribute essential enthusiasm and finesse to their respective roles. Despite the film’s shortcomings, the voice actors bring their characters to life with notable performances.
What’s Bad: The film’s emotional core, the love tale between Barry Allen and Iris West, needs more depth, leaving the audience detached. The film struggles with internal contradictions, attempting to...
Star Cast: Alexandra Daddario, Aldis Hodge, Matt Bomer, Jensen Ackles, Stana Katic, Jimmi Simpson
Director: Jeff Wamester
Director: Marv Wolfman, James Krieg
Review of Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths – Part One: A Disappointing Start to Crisis (Photo Credit – IMDb)
What’s Good: The voice cast, including Matt Bomer, Ashleigh Lathrop, and Christopher North, delivers performances on par with previous entries in the franchise. Bomer’s earnest portrayal of The Flash echoes the character’s Silver Age origins, while Lathrop and North contribute essential enthusiasm and finesse to their respective roles. Despite the film’s shortcomings, the voice actors bring their characters to life with notable performances.
What’s Bad: The film’s emotional core, the love tale between Barry Allen and Iris West, needs more depth, leaving the audience detached. The film struggles with internal contradictions, attempting to...
- 1/21/2024
- by Hari P N
- KoiMoi
Legendary Pictures’ MonsterVerse now has its own spinoff series on Apple TV+ with Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, and it’s aiming to capture the hearts of those kaiju fans invested in the production company’s shared cinematic universe. The MonsterVerse fandom has arguably split itself into two camps over the years, with one side more keen on the serious and dramatic Godzilla and Godzilla: King of the Monsters, while the other gravitates to its more ludicrous fare, Kong: Skull Island and Godzilla vs. Kong.
Monarch is definitely for the former camp, but even if you’re in neither, Apple and Legendary are hoping that you’re enthralled enough by the films’ central scientific organization that you’ll happily sit through an entire series about it as long as you occasionally get to see a titan or two in action. In that way, it reminds me of a little show called Agents of Shield,...
Monarch is definitely for the former camp, but even if you’re in neither, Apple and Legendary are hoping that you’re enthralled enough by the films’ central scientific organization that you’ll happily sit through an entire series about it as long as you occasionally get to see a titan or two in action. In that way, it reminds me of a little show called Agents of Shield,...
- 11/17/2023
- by Kirsten Howard
- Den of Geek
Spoiler Alert: This article contains details of tonight’s Season 5 finale of The Flash.
On Monday night, the conclusion of the jam-packed Season 7 finale of Arrow was pointed toward one thing: “Crisis on Infinite Earths,” the mega-crossover event next fall that will unite most (and maybe all) of the costumed superheroes in the CW’s battalion of DC Comics screen properties. Tonight, on the Season 5 finale The Flash, the fastest man alive quickly followed in the footsteps of his bow-toting compatriot, by further setting the stage for the “Crisis” crossover that, by early indications, may well end with one or both of them dead — or perhaps attending a funeral for a Kryptonian friend in National City.
The CW’s so-called Arrowverse has been keeping a crossover tradition every fall but the scale and impact of the next one sets it apart. The first hint of that came when the name...
On Monday night, the conclusion of the jam-packed Season 7 finale of Arrow was pointed toward one thing: “Crisis on Infinite Earths,” the mega-crossover event next fall that will unite most (and maybe all) of the costumed superheroes in the CW’s battalion of DC Comics screen properties. Tonight, on the Season 5 finale The Flash, the fastest man alive quickly followed in the footsteps of his bow-toting compatriot, by further setting the stage for the “Crisis” crossover that, by early indications, may well end with one or both of them dead — or perhaps attending a funeral for a Kryptonian friend in National City.
The CW’s so-called Arrowverse has been keeping a crossover tradition every fall but the scale and impact of the next one sets it apart. The first hint of that came when the name...
- 5/15/2019
- by Geoff Boucher
- Deadline Film + TV
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