Twitter reaction to ‘Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD’

agents of shield fire

So Marvel aired the entire pilot episode of “Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD” at San Diego Comic Con today.

Twitter had a few opinions.

  1. Just watched the @AgentsofSHIELD pilot and it’s AWESOME! Can’t wait til september

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  2. Okay, @AgentsofSHIELD was everything I hoped it would be and more. Totally the most fun, most heartfelt pilot of the fall.

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  3. No Spoilers, but the first ep of @AgentsofSHIELD is magic!! #SDCC

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  4. The next 67 days are going to feel like an eternity waiting for @AgentsofSHIELD

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  5. So the @AgentsofSHIELD pilot was ABSOLUTELY AMAZING. Bring on episode 2! #SDCC #MARVEL

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  6. Just watched the @AgentsofSHIELD PILOT!!! Ahhhh!!! #SDCC2013 soooooo good! And FUNNY!! You’re going to love it! #CoulsonLives

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  7. And one of the moments near the end of the ep was so good and heartfelt and man I can’t wait for the rest. @AgentsofSHIELD

  8. Joss just showed us the pilot for @AgentsofSHIELD – it’s perfect. Watch abc September 24.

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  9. @Marvel @AgentsofSHIELD GREATEST PANEL EVER!!! Got to see the 1st ep! @josswhedon is the best!! #CoulsonLives #fruitofbasket #comiccon

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  10. @AgentsofSHIELD #CoulsonLives #SDCC oh man thank you. Pilot was above and beyond expectations!

  11. Just saw the entire pilot for @AgentsOfSHIELD. All I can say is: YES! OMG YES!! #SDCC #CoulsonLives

  12. Just got to watch the @AgentsofSHIELD pilot at #SDCC — so awesome!!! #CoulsonLives

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  13. Guys, however great you think @AgentsofSHIELD is going to be, it is ten times better.

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  14. @AgentsofSHIELD There are no words. Spectacular! Hilarious and exciting and Coulson kicking ass!

  15. The accent thing helps us seem more intelligent than we are ~ Elizabeth

  16. Wait ’til you see episode 2~Clark

  17. @AgentsofSHIELD I am SO in!!!! Pilot episode is AWESOME!!!!! #Marvel #SDCC @clarkgregg #CoulsonLives

     Retweeted by Agents of SHIELD
    And others.
    The show debuts Sept. 24 on ABC.

Movie classic: ‘Ace in the Hole’

kirk douglas ace in the hole

As a lifelong reporter and writer, I’ve always been interested in the way movies and TV shows portrayed the newspaper profession. A few, like Jack Webb’s classic “30,” are accurate if melodramatic. The Kurt Russell drama “The Mean Season” did a pretty good job telling the story of a reporter tracking a killer. So did “Zodiac.”

Most reporter portrayals on TV and in movies are awful, however. They’re corrupt or incompetent, assholes or timid sops.

“Ace in the Hole” portrays an ambitious reporter not only as ruthless but morally bankrupt.

And I loved it.

ace in the hole douglas outside

The 1951 drama – known as “The Big Carnival” for most of its existence – was made by Billy Wilder and stars Kirk Douglas as Chuck Tatum, a big-city reporter who’s been fired at a dozen papers across the country and ends up taking a job at a paper in Albuquerque. It’s a paper that he hates and can’t wait to leave; he clashes with and insults the editor and staff.

Tatum can’t wait to get out of this one-horse town and make it back to the big city – New York especially – and thinks he sees a chance when he stumbles across a cave-in in a mountain used as a burial ground for Native Americans. Leo, who sells Native trinkets at his roadside store nearby, was looking for pottery when he was trapped by a cave-in.

Tatum ingratiates himself with Leo – going into the cave and taking the man a blanket and coffee when no one else will take the chance – and begins making notes for his story. He also befriends Leo’s faithless wife (Jan Sterling).

Leo’s plan? Produce sensational coverage of the trapped man over the course of several days and win his way back to the big time.

He works toward this goal by persuading the local sheriff (Ray Teal of “Bonanza” fame) to use a rescue method that will actually slow down the process. He convinces the sheriff that the longer the story continues, the more heroic he will look.

Meanwhile, thousands of gawkers descend on the site, fattening the pocketbooks of the people of the small town.

“Ace in the Hole” is great noir, gritty and stark and bitterly funny.

douglas newspaper ace in the hole

Oh!  The great Billy Wilder dialogue and lines:

“I can handle big news and little news. And if there’s no news, I’ll go out and bite a dog.”

“I don’t go to church. Kneeling bags my nylons.”

Reporter to Tatum: “We’re all in the same boat.” Tatum: “I’m in the boat. You’re in the water. Now let’s see how you can swim.”

“Bad news sells best. Because good news is no news.”

“It’s a good story today. Tomorrow they’ll wrap a fish it it.”

Editor: “Do you drink a lot?” Tatum: “Not a lot. Just frequently.”

Stars set for ‘Gone Girl?’

Rosamund-Pike-

I really liked Gillian Flynn’s twisty 2012 thriller “Gone Girl,” a terrific mystery novel about what happens when a wife goes missing and suspicion falls on her husband.

For the movie version, a number of stars have been considered for the roles of the husband and wife,  but the latest news makes it sound like Ben Affleck (whose “Argo” demonstrated his directing skills but who hasn’t been thought of as just a leading man for a while) and Rosamund Pike (most recently seen as the female lead in “Jack Reacher”) were likely to be cast.

ben affleck

Affleck seems like the perfect choice for the male lead. He can easily play a husband who would seem ideal and loving at first glance but could be quite unsympathetic when needed.

pike

And Pike could be good, I think, as the female lead, who is … well, I can’t even say. To describe the character would be to give away the plot, which has too many great turns to spoil.

David Fincher is directing.

 

RIP Dennis Burkley

dennis burkley

Dennis Burkley has died at age 67.

Burkley was one of those actors whose face – and, to a great extent, his voice – was instantly recognizable for movie and TV audiences.

Burkley was perhaps best known for playing rough guys and biker types, particularly in the 1985 tearjerker “Mask” as one of Sam Elliott’s biker buds who befriends Rocky (Eric Stoltz), the free-spirited but disfigured teen.

Burkley was, for some of us, equally recognizable for smaller roles in movies like “No Way Out” and many, many TV series.

We’ll miss you, Mr. Burkley. We’re glad your legacy will live on.

Classic comic strip: ‘The Lockhorns’

lockhorns sofa

I’m kind of amazed “The Lockhorns” didn’t debut until 1968. Even when I read it as a kid – when it was still new – it felt like a comics page panel that had settled into routine decades ago.

The strip was, for those not familiar with it, about a long-married couple who plainly couldn’t stand each other. I never read a panel that gave any indication these people did anything but loathe each other. Love? It was gleefully, horribly, humorously missing from this union.

Each daily panel carried an insult. Loretta Lockhorn would criticize hubby Leroy’s drinking or his wandering eye. Leroy Lockhorn would criticize his wife’s cooking, driving, spending, etc.

Maybe it’s no surprise that this caustic comic didn’t come about until the late 1960s, though. It’s like the comics page version of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf.”

Bill Hoest created the strip. It’s continued to this day by Bunny Hoest.

And Leroy and Loretta still hate each other.

‘Pacific Rim’ is ‘Top Gun’ meets Godzilla

PACIFIC RIM

I was never the biggest fan in the world of Toho’s “Godzilla” series and their ilk. There’s lots to like in certain elements of the movies, particularly the first, black-and-white “Godzilla” film, which was a nightmarish funhouse mirror reflection of the atomic bombing of Japan that closed World War II.

Most of the later “Godzilla” movies, including those that introduced Gamera and Ghidora and Mothra and a variety of kaiju – Japanese for strange creatures – had some cool miniatures and pleasantly amusing “man in suit” special effects and they are watchable for their silliness. But terrifying? Awe-inspiring? No.

I think what was missing was the human element. Not just the scientists and military men on the ground, watching giant-sized mayhem unfold and trying to come up with a solution.

What was missing, it turns out, was “Top Gun.”

Director Guillermo Del Toro recognized not only the need to give the kaiju worthy human enemies but also the idea of introducing the soap opera-ish lives and traumatic pasts of the pilots of the fighter jets – here Jaegers, building-sized robots that battle the kaiju.

As everybody knows by now, “Pacific Rim” is the story of mankind’s response to a plague of kaiju – giant, destructive monsters, some with brute strength, some with acid spray, some with fiery breath – who arise from the sea through a rift in the bottom of the ocean and attack the mainland. San Francisco is the first to be hit, but eventually almost every city along the Pacific Rim finds itself fighting off monsters.

The nations of the world create the giant Jaegers, which are driven by two pilots, joined at the brain and working in tandem, to right the kaiju.

Del Toro makes this a fairly rich world, with war efforts like the Jaeger program as well as a wall-building effort that is doomed to failure. He also gives us the men and women who occupy this world.

“Pacific Rim” gives us some “Top Gun”-level conflict among the pilots and some personal stakes, including Raleigh’s (Charlie Hunnam) efforts to get back into the game after his brother’s death by kaiju years before, and Mako Mori (Rinko Kikuchi), who wants to be a Jaeger jockey to get revenge.

Charlie Day and Ron Perlman have a ball as a Jaeger program scientist and kaiju black market mobster, respectively, and Idris Elba is mesmerizing as the leader of the effort.

“Pacific Rim,” with its giant monster and robots, is like every little geek sci-fi fan’s dream come true on the big screen. It’s a good summertime movie that goes down easier than “Man of Steel.”

Some stray observations:

Pretty sure I heard a snatch of Godzilla cry from one of those kaiju.

I was startled to see that the SyFy channel cheapie “Sharknado” beat “Pacific Rim” to the punch on its “cut yourself out from the inside” joke. It might have even outdone it.

I’m guessing special effects limitations meant that so many battle scenes had to be in rain-swept darkness. I enjoyed the clarity we got in the few daytime scenes.

‘Sharknado’ blows us away

sharknado

“Sharknado” owned us all last night.

Social media like Twitter were ablaze Thursday night with jokes and jibes about the latest SyFy movie, featuring TV “stars” like Tara Reid and Ian Ziering fighting to survive a series of tornados and waterspouts raining … er, sharks … down on Los Angeles.

The sight of sharks falling from the sky and maliciously trying to snap up everything in sight was hilarious.

But even better was the accompanying Twitter onslaught, with almost everyone I follow, well-known and unknown, commenting on the show.

SyFy, the network behind “Mansquito” and “MegaShark” and other cheap and cheesy movies, blew up the Internet.

A big win for all of us. Especially the sharks. And Tara Reid.

More Madchen: Amick continues on ‘Longmire’

madchen amick longmire deena

I’ve noted before that Madchen Amick, the lovely and talented actress perhaps still best known for playing teenage waitress Shelly on the 1990-91 series “Twin Peaks,” is like gold for readers of this blog.

madchen-amick-mobile-wallpaper

So it’s been fun to note Amick’s recent TV appearances, from “Mad Men” to her latest recurring role on “Longmire,” A&E’s engaging series adaptation of Craig Johnson’s Walt Longmire mystery novels.

Amick’s appeared as Deena, the rekindled flame of Henry Standing Bear (Lou Diamond Phillips), on “Longmire,” showing up so far in two episodes, “Party’s Over” and “Sound and Fury,” the latter airing just this week.

At the top is a “Longmire” pic of Amick I found. I’m looking forward to seeing more appearances of the actress – and bringing you the latest on her here.

Go home, Marvel. You are drunk.

drunk spider-man

Yes, Spider-Man. When you start singing, we know you’re drunk.

captainamerica1979

And Cap, when you start wearing a motorcycle helmet with wings on it, we know you are drunk.

drinking carol danvers

Go home, Carol Danvers.

iron man 128 demon in bottle

Tony, you are undoubtedly Marvel’s most famous drunk.

tony-drunk

See?

Drunk_Hulk

Nobody needs to see that, Bruce. Go home, Drunk Hulk. (We love you on Twitter, though.)