Some CRAZY friends of mine went tonight told them Ardeth Bey said they should be ashamed of them selves, "WHO?!" :lol
Ardeth Bey the Medjai Warrior from the last franchise or Ardeth Bey the pseudonym used by Imhotep in the original 1932 film?
Some CRAZY friends of mine went tonight told them Ardeth Bey said they should be ashamed of them selves, "WHO?!" :lol
Ardeth Bey the Medjai Warrior from the last franchise or Ardeth Bey the pseudonym used by Imhotep in the original 1932 film?
If I want all my old monsters together. I'll just pop in my Monster Squad dvd.
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Not a horrible movie but definitely worth waiting for on Pay Per View. The attempts to inject humor from time-to-time fell short in the showing I was in.
The best description of the humor in this film that I heard was that they were trying too hard to be funny in a movie that was taking itself too seriously. They compared it to the 1999 Brendan Fraser film, stating that the '99 film had a lot of humor that flowed effortlessly because the movie did not take itself too seriously.
You forgot to add "dark". This film is part of their dark universe, cause there oh so edgy like that.
17% on RT now. I could be wrong, but I am pretty sure that there are infomercials with higher ratings on late night television :lol
All that's left is to count how many rasberry awards it wins.
That Kurtzman came to this conclusion is no surprise, as he is an expert at launching reboots and shaping cinematic franchises. He co-wrote the 2007 Transformers adaptation, then co-wrote and produced the 2009 Star Trek movie and its sequel. After that, he worked on Sony’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and its aborted spinoff universe. He’s also a co-creator on CBS’s revival of Hawaii Five-0, and its upcoming Star Trek prequel series, Discovery. But as the 46-year-old filmmaker explained during a conversation that became his guide to writing reboots and multiverses, the inception of the Dark Universe came long after he came aboard The Mummy, which he first joined as a producer.