Fanboys Anonymous

SPIDER-MAN: NO WAY HOME Movie Reviewpoint: Film's Hits & Misses Breakdown

Posted by Anthony Mango - Tuesday, December 21, 2021

On the latest edition of the Fanboys Anonymous REVIEWPOINT podcast, host Tony Mango breaks down the hits and misses of Spider-Man: No Way Home by discussing what worked, what didn't, and whether you should see it or skip it.

SPIDER-MAN: NO WAY HOME (2021):

DIRECTED BY
Jon Watts

WRITTEN BY
Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers

STARRING:
Tom Holland (Peter Parker / Spider-Man), Zendaya (MJ), Benedict Cumberbatch (Doctor Strange), Jacob Batalon (Ned Leeds), Jon Favreau (Happy Hogan), Jamie Foxx (Max Dillon / Electro), Willem Dafoe (Norman Osborn / Green Goblin), Alfred Molina (Dr. Otto Octavius / Doc Ock), Benedict Wong (Wong), Tony Revolori (Flash Thompson), J.K. Simmons (J. Jonah Jameson), Rhys Ifans (Dr. Curt Connors / The Lizard), Thomas Haden Church (Flint Marko / Sandman), and Marisa Tomei (May Parker)

With Spider-Man's identity now revealed, our friendly neighborhood web-slinger is unmasked and no longer able to separate his normal life as Peter Parker from the high stakes of being a superhero. When Peter asks for help from Doctor Strange, the stakes become even more dangerous, forcing him to discover what it truly means to be Spider-Man.

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HD wallpaper Spider-Man: No Way Home review
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Predicting the Plot of The Matrix Resurrections

Posted by Anthony Mango - Monday, December 20, 2021

Welcome to another edition of Predicting the Plot wherein I try my best to guess how an upcoming movie is going to play out from start to finish with as many details as I can possibly give, based entirely on the previews and lead-up material I've seen.

I might be dead wrong. I may get some things right. In any way, I encourage you to give your predictions just the same in the comments below.

For this edition, I'll be taking a red pill and spelling out my fan theory of what we're in store for with The Matrix Resurrections

What is the plot of The Matrix Resurrections film?

NOTE #1: It's important to state that this is not what I would do for the film, but what I think they've done in making the movie. I likely would have gone with some entirely different plot points, if not a wholly different film in general.

NOTE #2: I have stayed away from any spoilers. I won't be reading any comments, either, until after I've seen the movie.

The movie opens with Thomas Anderson living a normal life in what is fashioned to be 2021. Of course, while everything seems normal, that's not the reality. We've seen this song and dance before. He starts questioning the world around him, particularly as he has visions/dreams of the previous movies and senses a longing for Trinity.

His therapist writes this off as nonsense. I'm actually wondering if Anderson will be portrayed as a filmmaker or video game designer who created an IP called The Matrix and that's why we have that guy who looks like a Hollywood agent saying "going back to where it all started; back to The Matrix" like he's going to revisit the idea for a sequel. The therapist could even specify he thinks Anderson is wrapped up in his own creation and imagining that it exists for real, but clearly, that's just a delusion.

Then, Anderson's reached out to by Morpheus and we go back to the whole world-breaking "this is the true reality behind the scenes" stuff. Anderson has some time where he doesn't remember everything, but he remembers bits and pieces, so we can explain things to the audience but not have to go through it all. Back-tracking, but the speedy process.

This version of Morpheus looks different, though. I'm not sure how they'll write that idea into there, but I'm thinking it'll be that this is a reboot of the system and he's been cloned or something like that. That would maybe explain how Trinity is alive, too, but this is all just speculation.

I think Jessica Henwick's character, Bugs, is the new version of The One. I expect her to be the key to everything—not just the overall new hero that the torch is being passed to, but the entire reason why they made this film. The Wachowskis will have this as a reflection of themselves.

I'm hoping there isn't just some "peace didn't last and now we're back to the war against the machines again" nonsense like they did with the sequel trilogy of Star Wars. That defeats the whole purpose of the previous films. Instead, I'd rather it be a new faction causing some problems or a new glitch or something.

By the end, I'm expecting Neo to sacrifice himself and either be turned into code and/or merged with Bugs. That way, Keanu Reeves doesn't need to return, but there's an option for it if they want to explore that, and the real figurehead hero will be Bugs.

That's what I'm expecting to happen, but what do you think?
Give your predictions and thoughts on my guesses in the comments below!

RUMBLE Paramount+ Movie Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #53

Posted by Anthony Mango - Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Welcome to another edition of the Fanboys Anonymous FanTracks podcast! For this episode, we'll be watching the Paramount+ film Rumble from WWE Studios.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Rumble

Release Date: December 15, 2021
Directed by Hamish Grieve
Written by Hamish Grieve, Matt Lieberman and Alexandra Bracken
Starring Will Arnett (Steve), Geraldine Viswanathan (Winnie McEvoy), Terry Crews (Tentacular), Fred Melamed (Mayor), Charles Barkley (Rayburn Sr.), Chris Eubank (King Gorge), Bridget Everett (Lady Mayhem) with Tony Danza, Ben Schwartz, Becky Lynch, Roman Reigns and Michael Buffer

In a world where monsters are tame and monster wrestling is a popular sport, Winnie seeks to follow in her father's footsteps as a manager by turning an inexperienced monster into a contender.

FanTracks Episode 53 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice

Make sure to subscribe/follow on whatever platform you're listening, leave your comments on the videos or this post, share this with your friends and geek out with us!


WATCH THIS WITH US AND LEAVE YOUR COMMENTS BELOW!

FanTracks Rumble audio commentary
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Welcome to another edition of Predicting the Plot wherein I try my best to guess how an upcoming movie is going to play out from start to finish with as many details as I can possibly give, based entirely on the previews and lead-up material I've seen.

I might be dead wrong. I may get some things right. In any way, I encourage you to give your predictions just the same in the comments below.

For this edition, I'll be tackling my fan theory of what we're in store for with the latest entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Spider-Man: No Way Home

What is the plot of Spider-Man No Way Home film?

NOTE #1: It's important to state that this is not what I would do for the film, but what I think they've done in making the movie. I likely would have gone with some entirely different plot points, if not a wholly different film in general. Then again, my Spider-Man films wouldn't have had a character named Michelle Jones being called MJ and a version of Flash Thompson who is even more of a geek than Peter, so they've already well deviated from that.

NOTE #2: I have stayed away from any spoilers. I won't be reading any comments, either, until after I've seen the movie.

The movie opens with Peter Parker's identity being revealed from the end of the previous film. He rushes around New York, not knowing what to do. Eventually, he gets a phone call from Aunt May that police have shown up and he has to be home right away.

This may lead to his arrest and/or being taken in to the police station. If I were making the movie, I'd make sure there were some cameos of Jean DeWolff and such, but I'm not expecting that. What I AM expecting, though, is for Peter to have Matt Murdock as his defense attorney.

I think we'll get time jumps. This won't take place over one bad weekend or something. It'll be weeks, if not months.

Peter will be on some sort of probation or trial with the pending investigation that Murdock will be looking into the case for.

Over the course of several weeks or so, Peter will try to adjust to the world knowing his identity, but that will result in some problems. He'll most likely not be Spider-Man anymore, as he's trying to say that he's not the webslinger and any activity will be too suspicious. Maybe people will even start to question that that's obvious he IS Spider-Man, then, because Spider-Man hasn't been seen since the outing.

Issues will arise. J. Jonah Jameson spearheads the verbal attacks and propaganda. Peter will get increasingly more frustrated, if not scared for everyone else's lives. Maybe someone throws a brick through his home or something along those lines. Aunt May could be accosted or even targeted for a mugging or something to prove the severity of people in his life now being in danger.

Peter goes to talk to Doctor Strange. They have that discussion about the spell to make it so everyone forgets. Peter gets nervous that MJ and Ned will forget and has hesitations, which botch the spell.

That's when the multiverse starts leaking. Variants of the other villains bleed into this universe.

It seems like the explanation they're going with is that they all are supposed to die from Spider-Man's hand in their universes, but this has plucked them from that part of their timelines. That seems strange, but whatever.

Doctor Strange realizes this is going on and informs Peter of it. Strange wants to imprison them. Peter's good heart gets the better of him and he falls victim to some boo hoo, probably from Doc Ock, where he thinks it's inhumane to imprison them. They should be sent back to their universes.

That's when Peter steals the box that Doctor Strange is seen fighting with him over in the trailers. They have their mind warp action sequence. Peter accidentally makes things even worse.

Most of the rest of the film is spent trying to round them up. In the process, Tobey Maguire's Spider-Man and Andrew Garfield's Spider-Man also come through portals to help fight them off.

They impart some wisdom, possibly repeating Uncle Ben's trademark line. If any of them dies, I think it's Andrew Garfield's Spider-Man in a self-sacrifice moment.

The "do it" line that Peter says in the trailer, seemingly to Doctor Strange, is something I'm torn on. Either it's what I'm fearing, which is that Strange can only send Peter to another dimension and there's no way home back into the MCU, meaning Sony just does their own Spider-Man movies again and he's no longer in the MCU, or what I'm hoping is the case, which is that Strange says the only way he can stop some sort of cataclysm is to somewhat merge the universes together. That way, we get Venom at the end of this and it means there's more interconnectivity.

My ideal scenario is that Sony gets taken out of the Spider-Man business entirely, but that's not happening. Maybe there's a third option, though. Maybe it's something like Doctor Strange can only seal the portals if he indeed makes everyone forget Peter's identity like the beginning spell was trying to do, meaning MJ has to forget again and such.

I can't imagine this movie ends with Peter's identity still being public. I don't think Aunt May will die. Happy Hogan might, but I'm not banking on May, MJ or Ned getting killed off.

I don't think there will be any surprise reveals that Mysterio is still alive and concocted this whole thing. Maybe, just maybe, there's a Kingpin reference if they have that all planned out with Hawkeye and Daredevil.

As mentioned, the post-credit will involve Venom, but there may also be something about Morbius to try to spark some interest in people seeing that movie. There may also be something about Multiverse of Madness.

That's what I'm expecting to happen, but what do you think?
Give your predictions and thoughts on my guesses in the comments below!

Red Notice Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #52

Posted by Anthony Mango - Friday, December 3, 2021

Welcome to another edition of the Fanboys Anonymous FanTracks podcast! For this episode, we'll be watching the Netflix film Red Notice.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Red Notice

Release Date: November 5, 2021
Written and Directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber
Starring Dwayne Johnson (John Hartley), Ryan Reynolds (Nolan Booth), Gal Gadot (Sarah Black / The Bishop), Ritu Arya (Inspector Urvashi Das), Chris Diamantopoulos (Sotto Voce), Ivan Mbakop (Tambwe), Vincenzo Amato (Director Gallo) and Rafael Petardi (Security Chief Ricci)

FanTracks Episode 52 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice .

Make sure to subscribe/follow on whatever platform you're listening, leave your comments on the videos or this post, share this with your friends and geek out with us!


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FanTracks Red Notice audio commentary
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Predicting the Plot of Ghostbusters: Afterlife Film

Posted by Anthony Mango - Thursday, October 28, 2021

Welcome to another edition of Predicting the Plot wherein I try my best to guess how an upcoming movie is going to play out from start to finish with as many details as I can possibly give, based entirely on the previews and lead-up material I've seen.

I might be dead wrong. I may get some things right. In any way, I encourage you to give your predictions just the same in the comments below.

For this edition, I'll be tackling my fan theory of what we're in store for with the third true installment in the Ghostbusters franchise, Ghostbusters: Afterlife

What is the plot of Ghostbusters Afterlife film?

NOTE: It's important to state that this is not what I would do for the film, but what I think they've done in making the movie. I likely would have gone with some entirely different plot points, if not a wholly different film in general. — In fact, if you want to know my pitch for Ghostbusters III from the very first post published on this website, click here for that story.

This movie doesn't strike me as the type that will start with something too big like an action sequence to "make sure the audience is sold from the start." Instead, I think we're diving right into the family dynamics to establish the new characters, as that will be important. It's their journey we're following and we don't know them.

Who are they? Well, based on the trailers, it seems Egon had a kid at some point before the first film with someone he was estranged enough from that she never factored into the two movies. I say this because Carrie Coon is 40 years old (born in 1981) and if she were to have been born after Ghostbusters II, that's an 8 year difference at least. For her to be 32 and for Finn Wolfhard to be 18, she'd have to be pregnant at 14, which isn't a plot point I'd imagine they'd want to get into.

Sooooo let's just say they write it off as either he had a kid he didn't know about until later on, or that they never mentioned his daughter in the other movies because he was divorced. The plot won't focus much on this at all. It'll be pushed aside as just "he had a kid in some fashion, so let's move on." I don't think it'll be a situation where her mother is Janine as I haven't seen any of these characters referred to as having the surname Melnitz. Nor Spengler, for that matter. But let's brush past the potential deadbeat dad aspect and move on.

Egon's daughter, Callie, grew up largely without his presence in her life. She had a son (Trevor, Finn Wolfhard) and a daughter (Phoebe, McKenna Grace). As they say in the trailers, they're broke at the start of the story and they have to move into this old farmhouse that was left to them by Egon, who dies at the start of the movie or just prior to it and has gifted this to them in his will. Maybe the will acts as a driving force of the plot in other ways, like hinting at the secrets he was looking into and such. Maybe it's just a means for them to go there in particular.

Trevoris a troubled, but good kid. He's one of those "I need to rebel because I'm angry about my parents, but I'll watch out for my little sister and I'm actually responsible" types of adolescents who we can recognize as a handful at the start of the movie without not being able to root for him later on. Phoebe fits into the socially awkward genius trope. Clearly, she takes after her grandfather, who collects spores, molds and fungus. Moving to a new school and all has its own challenges. Finn's all "this town suuuuucks" and Phoebe's only able to connect with maybe the kid called Podcast and her teacher, Mr. Grooberson (Paul Rudd).

Callie and Mr. Grooberson have the "romantic" subplot. IE, if anyone is going to shack up in the movie, it's either those two, or Trevor gets a girlfriend (Lucky), but it's probably not a huge focal point. They'll just be the Keymaster and Gatekeeper to Gozer.

Toward the start of the movie, when they are looking at the new house, someone unknowingly sets off a chain of events that will lead to the ghost outbreak. Throughout the film, an abandoned mine shaft (Shandor Mining Co) is the source of all this ghostly activity. It was created by Ivo Shandor as another place to summon ghosts and worship Gozer. Egon moved there to study it and try to make sure nothing ever happened like the incident in 1984 ever again.

The original Ghostbusters had seen split up and figured there was nothing else going on. As Mr. Grooberson says in the trailer, there hasn't been a ghost sighting in 30 years. What do you do as exterminators of a pest that doesn't have any clientele? The second film shows them down on their luck already not being popular enough for stupid birthday parties and the like, so they couldn't possibly have kept the business going for another 30 years even after the Statue of Liberty incident. Nobody's popularity is indefinite.

I'm assuming/hoping Dana and Peter settled down. I'd love for "Oscar Venkman" to be confirmed in some fashion and maybe show up in the sequel to this, if there is one (and I assume if it's perceived well, there will be a follow-up). Ray seems to have a shop of some kind and seems bitter, so maybe he's just sole old tech junkie nutjob type who babbles nonsense to most people. Winston's an average Joe, so he just did average Joe things.

After Trevor restores the Ecto-1, they get the equipment up and running, and Phoebe works with Mr. Grooberson on deciphering what's going on with the earthquakes in town. they start trying to bring down the ghosts like Muncher. That is, until the dogs come out to play.

Then, basically, we get the end of Ghostbusters I once more. Gozer is back, has the Keymaster/Grooberson and Gatekeeper/Callie as minions, and it's up to our rag tag group of heroes to save the day. I don't think we're going to see the original team suit up to fight with them, but if we're lucky, that happens. If that does happen, I think they all die in the process to save the kids.

At the end, all is well. Gozer's done forever and we have our new team (Trevor, Phoebe, Lucky, Podcast, maybe some others, with Callie and Mr. Grooberson supervising them as, you know, adults) in case anything happens in the future, which is implied to be a possibility after we see Muncher interacting with Slimer to pop the audience.

That's what I'm expecting to happen, but what do you think?
Give your predictions and thoughts on my guesses in the comments below!

Fanboys Fix It: 007 Problems with Daniel Craig's James Bond Films

Posted by Anthony Mango - Monday, October 25, 2021

The Daniel Craig era of the James Bond franchise has finished. After taking some time to fully digest how No Time to Die fits in the overall picture of his films as well as the series as a whole, I find myself echoing opinions I've had from the start.

Largely, my opinion about Craig's Bond films is a mixed bag. Some showcase the best elements of the 007 franchise, while others have unforgivable flaws. For every Casino Royale in the top 5, there's Quantum of Solace toward the bottom. The best Bond girl of all time may be Vesper Lynd, but Elvis may be the worst henchmen of the series. It's very hit or miss.

As such, and as another follow-up to our A Review to a Kill series, I'd like to tackle another edition of FANBOYS FIX IT—a segment where I like to not just talk about the issues I had with something, but propose ideas of how to improve it.

With that being said, how would I fix Daniel Craig's run of the Bond films?

Fundamental Flaw #001: Timing

Craig was Bond for 15 years and only has 5 movies to his name. In comparison, Roger Moore was Bond for 12 years and did 7. Sean Connery was Bond for 9 years and filmed 6 (and there was also On Her Majesty's Secret Service with George Lazenby in that time frame). Pierce Brosnan squeezed 4 in 7 years.

Realistically, over 15 years, Craig should have done between 6 and 8 movies, if not 9. It just so happened that every single movie appeared to be riddled with issues from production problems, injuries, legal stuff, a writer's strike and a pandemic.

Assuming in this fantasy world that I could prevent that from happening with the benefit of hindsight, I'd like to make it so Craig doesn't feel like this is taking away his best years of acting and resents the role (from public perception) and that he doesn't reach a point quicker where he's too old for the part. Granted, he looks better in his final appearance than any other Bond does save for Timothy Dalton by default, but that's just a testament to Craig's workout routine.

I also think more films overall would have allowed him to experiment more with the character in ways he didn't get a chance to. We never really got to see some tropes of the franchise given his own twist to it.

Fundamental Flaw #002: The Age Gap Storyline

One of my absolute biggest issues with his films is how they felt they couldn't tell a story unless there was a hook to it and fell into a trap of bookending it with his age.

The first film is "young Bond before he became the man we know." Then, they had no other idea for the second film, so they said "...well, okay, he's not 100% there yet, so this is the remaining bit of the previous one. NOW, he's James Bond, full in form."

Then, instead of getting a true 007 film per normal, they went straight into "old dog, new tricks" and saying that Bond has aged out of being useful for his job. Immediately, he's a rookie and then he should retire. What??!

That's like saying Batman went from training, having his first couple nights in Gotham, and then hanging up his boots without ever having Robin and whatnot.

Oh...you mean to tell me Christopher Nolan did that with his Dark Knight franchise? And then, Zack Snyder decided to start his Batman as a grizzled 40+ year old who had already had Robin die (and not even the right Robin) and wanted to retire? I'm sensing a trend. Hopefully, Tom Holland doesn't just give up being Spider-Man with No Way Home.

With the increase in number of films, that makes it so we can actually live with this Bond. The first movie can be his origin, the second can follow up on that, and we can have a few other films where he's fully realized before we start getting into aging him out of the role.

This means Skyfall, which I think should be the mid-point of this collection of movies just the same as it was here, shouldn't be about Bond being the Old Yeller, but about him being the "new toy" for M, in a lot of ways, while Raoul Silva was the old dog upset about being replaced.

Fundamental Flaw #003: A Reverence for the Old Tropes

This era of the series pats itself back on saying "We know the previous films loved tropes, but we're too good for that and we want you to know that." It's a problem that plagued the sequel Star Wars trilogy where a character who is the son of legacy heroes literally complains in plain dialogue that if you need to kill off the past in order to replace it with your own ideas, you should.

Look at how that left the series. People went nuts for the return of Luke Skywalker in The Mandalorian and I bet you can't even tell me who Lando's daughter is. Go ahead. Try to name her without looking her up. Oh wait, you didn't even know that that character in The Rise of Skywalker was supposed to be his daughter? Awful movies.

But two of the ways the Daniel Craig era tries to push this agenda is by ignoring the gadgets and the lines from before.

We have smart blood three times out of these five films because they couldn't think of anything else to do. Those other gadgets they have are a tracking radio that is bigger than nearly all other tracking software or "call for help" gadgets he's had since even Goldfinger, a gun that only works if Bond's hand is using it (which we already saw in Licence to Kill), two watches and a couple cars that thankfully had some bells and whistles toward the end.

They flat out denounce the exploding pen from GoldenEye as if it was some ridiculous gadget. It's a pen with a grenade in it. That's much more believable than your alligator submarine. Make fun of that if you want to poke fun at how ridiculous some of this used to be.

They also try their best to avoid saying "shaken, not stirred" and "Bond, James Bond" and some of the other lines of normal dialogue, if not just to subvert expectations and play with the audience.

So in my fixes, I say give him more gadgets and just make sure you don't go too over the top with it. Put in the lines of dialogue that you'd normally do, but just find new ways of delivering them.

And for God's sake, do a traditional gun barrel in front of every movie. If you want to play around with it the first time with Casino Royale, that's something, but every film past that point should have had it. No excuses.

Fundamental Flaw #004: Moneypenny and Q and Felix

Part of the old era that should have carried over sooner is for three of the primary allies to be factored into the series more.

Felix Leiter shows up temporarily in three of the films and doesn't do much at all. I'd simply like to see him have more to do and to get more into the brotherly bond between them.

Q should have been there from the start.

Moneypenny should have maybe been there from the start, too. If not, maybe she's M's new secretary in the second film, but it shouldn't have played out the way it did. For my tastes, I don't think "Eve Moneypenny" should have been a typical Bond girl who is in the field and shoots Bond and then goes behind a desk.

There's nothing wrong with "Jane Moneypenny" either, for that matter.

Fundamental Flaw #005: Oberhauser and Blofeld / Quantum and Spectre

I get that legal issues stopped them from being able to use SPECTRE, but they didn't need to call the organization Quantum. That's a dumb name. Quantum of Solace is one of my favorite titles (despite how some people are too dumb to understand the words; that's their fault for being morons) but it makes zero proper sense when you find out that's the name of the secret organization.

Instead, it should have remained a mystery until they could have said SPECTRE. We could have been seeing hints about an octopus ring and all and been led to the conclusions ourselves without flat out stating that to be the case. Someone could have referred to themselves as a number, implying a No. 1 is out there. So on and so forth.

It obviously should have been SPECTRE all along, but it never should have been Franz Oberhauser. The idea of making Bond and Blofeld brothers, no matter what the connection point, is beyond ridiculous. They shouldn't know each other for anything other than work having had them cross paths.

So here's my rewrite where you get to have your cake and eat it, too.

Around film #3 or 4 (ideally #4) you have Skyfall. Most of the film plays out the way it does, where M is the focal point as a motherly figure, she's killed by Silva, it all goes down at Skyfall and we dive into Bond's past, etc. There's no "Bond is too old" subplot. You end with Mallory taking over as M, like in the movie, and since he's stuffy, he doesn't want Bond to go on a revenge mission.

But Bond is Bond, so he does. He's out to seek answers, to find this mysterious No. 1 and to kill him to get back at Olivia Mansfield's death. They love doing rogue Bond and we get to see that here in its own way, but with Moneypenny and Q trying to circumvent the new M's ideas of "nope, I have to prove myself to not be a pushover and I can't let Bond do this to undermine my authority."

Blah blah blah. Bond's lost everything from his childhood home and even Kincaid dies, his motherly M is dead, and he really has nothing left. Or so he thinks. That's when he gets a message from Franz Oberhauser, his foster brother for a short time frame. After Bond's parents died, he was taken in by the Oberhauser family. Bond has his issues, as we know, so he didn't really get along with them as he put up emotional barriers and the like. Once he reached 15 or so, he went into military service and went down this career path and never really bothered with them again.

Now, though, Oberhauser is being targeted to get revenge on Bond and he feels responsible, obviously.

Eventually, Bond meets Blofeld. He's just Blofeld. It's not some twist about it being Oberhauser, who is ultimately killed in the movie as the sacrificial lamb. Blofeld can even keep the "author of all your pain" line and say that he has no political motives for having gone after Oberhauser and all. He did it for fun. Just to fuck with Bond. Bond's messed with his plans too many times and now, any time he gets in his way, he's not only going to stop him, but he'll be looking for ways to perpetually target anyone he loves and to just ruin his life as much as possible.

Bond doesn't kill Blofeld, as Blofeld escapes. We know he'll be back at any random time. Nobody gets their wheelchair picked up by a helicopter and tossed into a giant exhaust pipe. No one is offered a delicatessen in stainless steel. But Bond does manage to fuck up Blofeld's eyeball and leave him with the iconic scar.

Fundamental Flaw #006: Madeleine Swann

For the most part, Madeleine Swann and the Mr. White saga was a retelling of On Her Majesty's Secret Service with some twists. The music cues in No Time to Die flat out call attention to this. But if you replace Swann with Tracy and Mr. White with Draco, that's basically what you get.

So why not just call them that?

"Mr. White" is his codename. Bond finds out he's actually Marc-Ange Draco. Instead of the name Madeleine Swann, his daughter is Teresa Draco, who is estranged from her father because of his crimes. She's married to someone named Count Giulio di Vicenzo (so she goes by Tracy di Vicenzo). Unbeknownst to her, her husband is a plant, essentially. He works for her father and his job is basically to always be in contact with him so he knows what his daughter is up to. He's never really been a husband, which is why he became so awful after they got married, because he's been keeping up the facade and he doesn't actually love her.

Bond can save her from di Vicenzo, who can be even the heavy/henchman of the film. You can maybe even keep the babyface turn for Mr. White where he wants to leave SPECTRE and he wants Bond to take care of his daughter. Naturally, White has to die, too. We end with Tracy and Bond as a couple. But of course, Blofeld is lingering.

I wouldn't have cast Lea Seydoux in this part, either. She's much better as a femme fatale like a Miranda Frost type character.

Fundamental Flaw #007: The Finale

I have two opinions about how No Time to Die ends. In one way, I think Bond is a tragic character and he kind of has to die to really drive home that point to the audience. However, in another way that I feel even stronger about, I think there are more ways to tell a tragedy than for the protagonist to die.

I had been saying leading up to the movie that I thought they would have the ending be that Madeleine dies and Bond is left to retire because he's going to take care of his daughter, who is the true "Bond girl" in a sense. We got something similar, but with Bond biting the bullet and leaving Madeleine alive with Mathilde.

Therefore, just switch it up. Tracy/Madeleine is killed, because Bond's love life is awful, and since he has a daughter now, he knows he can't go globetrotting as a super spy. He kills Blofeld, SPECTRE dissolves, and he's aged to the point where he can realistically retire anyway, so he's going to just raise his daughter instead.

So what do you think? What flaws from the Daniel Craig era of James Bond would you fix and how would you propose to fix them? Drop your thoughts in the comments below!

I haven't been using Pokemon Home for too long, but after getting back into Pokemon Go a few months ago and realizing I was getting rid of Pokemon I would like to trade to actual games in the future, but having no space for them, I eventually opted to pay for the annual premium plan subscription. Since then, I've been heavily sending Pokemon from Go and trying to make use of the GTS and Wonder Trade systems to get as close to a full Pokedex as I possibly can.

In the process, I've noticed some things that I really wish were on the app, but aren't. Some of them are for convenience while others are just tools and sorting options I think would be incredibly useful and should have been the standard to begin with.

Without further ado, here are 10 improvements I think should be made to Pokemon Home.


#1. Multi-Trade for the GTS

More than anything on this list, this is what I'd want (even though the rest aren't in any ranked order). The way it is now, you can select 3 Pokemon to specifically request a trade for (ie, I will trade this Rotom for this particular type of Rayquaza). My idea would be that you can toss out more of a grab bag type of thing like Wonder Trade, but that you have specifics you're looking for in return.

The best way to explain it is to just spell it out with an example of the mathematical formula it would operate on, in a sense.

"I will deposit these x# Pokemon. Anyone can take them if they're looking for them, so long as they offer me any of the following in exchange."

For example, I could put 50 Pidgey in there of varying levels and such, and I can say that I'm requesting all the legendaries. I doubt anyone would want to take any of those offers, but if anyone does decide that they will upload, say, "one of the Pokemon in my deposit box is a Zapdos and one of the Pokemon I'm looking for in return is a Pidgey", then Pokemon Home would send an alert to both of us saying an eligible trade has been found and ask if we would like to confirm it. Only one of us needs to confirm, ideally, so you're not stuck with someone who is playing around and locking up trades by not confirming it. Maybe it just automatically does the trade for you like Wonder Trade because hey pal, you set up those parameters and they were met.

For all I know, someone out there has the Guzzlord that I need and they're willing to trade for 10 different Pokemon that I have, including the Duraludon that I have sitting in GTS right now, but I happen to have that listed as "I'll trade Duraludon for Buzzwole". I'd take the Guzzlord trade, since I need that, too, but I happen to have "I'll trade Dusknoir for Guzzlord" instead, so it's just never going to happen. But if I could say "I'll trade any of these for any of these," it might.

#2. Don't Have the Form? GTS Says You Don't Have the Pokemon

Ever since I got a Furfou and a Vivillon in Pokemon Home, I've had this issue where I'm searching for a Pokemon I need in the GTS with the "include people searching for Pokemon you don't have" function off, but I'll see tons of examples of people requesting Heart Trim form Furfrou or a particular Vivillon pattern.

If I had them, they should obviously show up. But just because I have a Furfrou of any form, it shows all the form options. There aren't any mechanics within Pokemon Home to change the forms, so it's just flat out wrong that I "have the Pokemon" available.

This means when I search for a Pokemon in the GTS, I inevitably have to scroll past the Furfrou and Vivillon requests. Even if I had that specific one, I wouldn't know they were looking for it, because I'd have to click on each individual one to check to see what form they were looking for.

That's maddening. If you don't have the form, it should be treated as if you don't have that particular Pokemon at all and not show up as a trade option.

#3. Stop Allowing Impossible Requests

If it doesn't really exist, people shouldn't have the option to request it. I don't understand this idea some people have where they'll put a shiny legendary or something in the GTS and request something impossible like a level 1 shiny Cinderace. All that does is clog up the system.

Apparently, people do it to "flex" that they have that Pokemon. If you're one of those people, you're a jackass. Nobody's looking up your trainer ID so they can send you praise and be jealous. You're not getting laid because of it or a pay raise at work. If that's really a means for you to feel better about yourself, it's very sad and you should reassess some of your life choices. This is a silly children's game of collecting fake cartoon monsters. It's supposed to be fun, not something you attach your self-esteem to.

#4. Trading Mythical Pokemon Should Be Allowed

Simply put, if someone wants to trade me their Mew for my Caterpie, they should be able to.

I wouldn't, but there are people out there who would. More importantly, there are people who might have a million Meltan and want to give that to someone else in exchange for a Jirachi. Like me. I've got enough Meltan and I can always get more with Pokemon Go, so how about I give one of those to some kid somewhere who has a Victini they want to get rid of so I'm not just missing that one?

#5. Sort Pokemon by Quantity

Why are you not able to sort by the number of each particular Pokemon you have? That would make it infinitely easier to toss Pokemon into the Wonder Trade or GTS.

If I have 30 Drowzee, I want to get rid of them in the Wonder Trade before I'd put my last Hypno. As it stands, I have to sort by dex number and scroll down and manually look to see which ones look like they have more than a few. That takes a longer time than I'd like, as I'd love to be able to just sort by quantity ascending and descending. That way, the top of the list shows I have 20 Spearow? I'll toss some in there. It shows I only have 1 Jynx? Now I know not to click on that one.

#6. More Than 10 on Wonder Trade

This one is pretty self-explanatory. I'd love to be able to toss more than 10 Pokemon into the Wonder Trade system to speed up the process.

Make it practically infinite. At least make it 20 or 50, or 100.

Imagine the rush some people would feel if they wanted to gamble, take all their Pokemon in one shot and Wonder Trade them to see what they get. That could make for some fun YouTube video content where people do that.

#7. Free Trade Room Classes and Groups

There should be different groups of the free trade room that give you rules you have to follow.

Obviously, there should be a "completely random and anything goes" room like there is now. But there should also be rooms like "only legendary" where you literally can't participate in the trade process unless you select a legendary Pokemon.

Only mythical. Only Kanto (as well as any other generation, or game). Only shiny. Only level 100. Only for each type. So on and so forth.

That way, you know that if you go into the room that is Only Water Type, you toss out your Magikarp and you might get a Kyogre, but you're definitely not getting a Spinarak.

#8. Web Browser / Desktop Functionality

Using the app or the Nintendo Switch is nowhere near as convenient as a desktop client version would be. I'd love to be able to just log in via Firefox or a downloadable computer program and do this all with my keyboard and mouse. I'm one of those people who uses their computer pretty much 24/7 and is much more adept at that style of organization than to be using my phone and having to look at that smaller screen for a while. It wears my fingers out more to swipe on my screen than it does to use a mouse, too. I'm sure I'm not the only one who would like to be able to use Pokemon Home on their laptop or whatever.

#9. A Chat Function

Self-explanatory.

#10. Set a Locked Pokemon in Your Room Instead of Randomized

Every time you swipe away from the Your Room screen, a new Pokemon generates as the little character that will pop up. While I don't personally care, I'm sure some people would like to be able to choose a permanent "buddy" or something that will always be there.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THESE IDEAS?
DROP YOUR THOUGHTS IN THE COMMENTS BELOW!

NO TIME TO DIE: A Review to a Kill (James Bond 007 Podcast) Episode 0034

Posted by Anthony Mango - Monday, October 11, 2021

On episode 0034 of the Fanboys Anonymous A REVIEW TO A KILL podcast, hosts Tony Mango, Callum Wiggins and Robert DeFelice discuss the 007 elements of the James Bond film No Time to Die including the gadgets, the girls, the villains, the quips, the music and more.

NO TIME TO DIE:

DIRECTED BY
Cary Joji Fukunaga

WRITTEN BY
Neal Purvis (screenplay and story), Robert Wade (screenplay and story), Cary Joji Fukunaga (screenplay and story), Phoebe Waller-Bridge (screenplay)

STARRING:
Daniel Craig (James Bond), Léa Seydoux (Madeleine Swann), Rami Malek (Lyutsifer Safin), Lashana Lynch (Nomi), Ralph Fiennes (M), Ben Whishaw (Q), Naomie Harris (Eve Moneypenny), Rory Kinnear (Tanner), Billy Magnussen (Logan Ash), Jeffrey Wright (Felix Leiter), David Dencik (Valdo Obruchev), Dali Benssalah (Primo (Cyclops)) with Ana de Armas (Paloma) and Christoph Waltz (Ernst Stavro Blofeld)

Recruited to rescue a kidnapped scientist, globe-trotting spy James Bond finds himself hot on the trail of a mysterious villain, who's armed with a dangerous new technology.

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James Bond A Review to a Kill 007 podcast
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DC Injustice Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #51

Posted by Anthony Mango - Sunday, October 10, 2021

Welcome to another edition of the Fanboys Anonymous FanTracks podcast! For this episode, we'll be watching the latest DC animated film Injustice.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Injustice

Release Date: October 19, 2021
Directed by Matt Peters
Written by Ernie Altbacker (script), Ian Rodgers (script), Tom Taylor (original story)
Starring Justin Hartley (Clark Kent / Superman), Anson Mount (Bruce Wayne / Batman), Laura Bailey (Lois Lane, Rama Kushna), Gillian Jacobs (Harley Quinn), Reid Scott (Green Arrow, Victor Zsasz), Kevin Pollak (Joker, Jonathan Kent), Oliver Hudson (Plastic Man), Yuri Lowenthal (Mirror Master, Flash, Shazam), Anika Noni Rose (Catwoman), Faran Tahir (Ra's al Ghul), Janet Varney (Wonder Woman), Brandon Michael Hall (Cyborg), Brian T. Delaney (Green Lantern), Derek Phillips (Nightwing, Aquaman) and Fred Tatasciore (Captain Atom)

FanTracks Episode 51 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice

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FanTracks Injustice audio commentary
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AUSTIN POWERS IN GOLDMEMBER Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #50

Posted by Anthony Mango - Friday, October 1, 2021

As a spin-off of our A REVIEW TO A KILL series about the James Bond franchise, Fanboys Anonymous is providing you with another edition of the FanTracks podcast, this time for Austin Powers in Goldmember.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Austin Powers in Goldmember

Release Date: July 22, 2002
Directed by Jay Roach
Written by Mike Myers and Michael McCullers
Starring Mike Myers (Austin Powers / Dr. Evil / Fat Bastard / Goldmember), Beyonce (Foxxy Cleopatra), Seth Green (Scott Evil), Michael York (Basil Exposition), Robert Wagner (Number Two), Mindy Sterling (Frau Farbissina), Verne Troyer (Mini-Me), Fred Savage (Number Three) and Michael Caine (Nigel Powers)

Teaming up with the mysterious yet peculiar Goldmember, Dr. Evil hatches a time-traveling scheme to take over the world, one that involves the kidnapping of Nigel Powers, Austin's beloved father and England's most renowned spy. As he chases the villains through time, Austin visits 1975 and joins forces with his old flame, Foxxy Cleopatra, a streetwise but stylish detective. Together Austin and Foxxy must find a way to save Nigel and stop Dr. Evil and Goldmember from their mischievous mayhem.

FanTracks Episode 50 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice and Callum Wiggins.

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FanTracks Austin Powers in Goldmember audio commentary
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On the latest edition of the Fanboys Anonymous REVIEWPOINT podcast, host Tony Mango breaks down the hits and misses of Venom: Let There Be Carnage by discussing what worked, what didn't, and whether you should see it or skip it.

VENOM: LET THERE BE CARNAGE (2021):

DIRECTED BY
Andy Serkis

WRITTEN BY
Kelly Marcel (screenplay and story) and Tom Hardy (story)

STARRING:
Tom Hardy (Eddie Brock / Venom), Woody Harrelson (Cletus Kasady / Carnage), MIchelle Williams (Anne Weying), Naomie Harris (Frances Barrison / Shriek), Reid Scott (Dr. Dan Lewis), Peggy Lu (Mrs. Chen) and Stephen Graham (Detective Mulligan)

After finding a host body in investigative reporter Eddie Brock, the alien symbiote must face a new enemy, Carnage, the alter ego of serial killer Cletus Kasady.

Make sure to subscribe/follow on whatever platform you're listening, leave your comments on the videos or this post, share this with your friends and geek out with us!


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HD wallpaper Venom: Let There Be Carnage review
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Welcome to another edition of Predicting the Plot wherein I try my best to guess how an upcoming movie is going to play out from start to finish with as many details as I can possibly give, based entirely on the previews and lead-up material I've seen.

I might be dead wrong. I may get some things right. In any way, I encourage you to give your predictions just the same in the comments below.

For this edition, I'll be tackling my fan theory of what we're in store for with the latest James Bond film, No Time to Die.

What is the plot of 007 No Time to Die James Bond film?

NOTE: It's important to state that this is not what I would do for the film, but what I think they've done in making the movie. I likely would have gone with some entirely different plot points, if not a wholly different film in general.

To my despair, I don't think this movie starts with a traditional gun barrel. For the fourth out of five films, I think they're going to talk themselves out of it by saying James Bond's retired and there's no logical means of showing the gun barrel without being deceptive, blah blah blah. I really hope we don't see Lashana Lynch's Nomi in the gun barrel just because she's 007 now.

Our opening sequence will probably be just of the villains doing something dastardly. They kill some scientists or whatever. Then, Nomi is there to look into it and she manages to get some sort of clue that will help drive the plot, but she's unsuccessful in stopping the villains from executing part of their plan.

Cue titles and main theme.

Let's check up on where Bond is. He's with Madeleine Swann in Jamaica. They've settled down five years or so ago after Spectre and they're madly in love, but possibly, Bond is a little bored. He misses the life of being a 00 agent, but he knows what he's doing now is safer. There's some sort of hint that there's something else going on in their lives, but we're not told what. This will be massively important later.

Based on the clues, MI6 finds out that the person behind all this madness is Safin, and that he has ties to SPECTRE. Since nobody knows that organization as well as Bond, they reach out to him to try to get his thoughts on helping out. He's hesitant, back-and-forth about it, until Madeleine hears that it has to do with Safin. She reacts stunned and basically tells James that he needs to do this because if Safin is involved, it can't be good. Mysteriously, we don't know why she's all upset, and she refuses to say why. This drives a wedge between the two that will get deeper as the film goes on.

The bulk of the film is trying to figure out more information on Safin's plan, which will eventually be revealed as some sort of biological warfare. Plot elements along the way that are interwoven with that are:

  • Madeleine helped Safin study the rare plants or procedures or whatever that led to him being able to create this biological weapon. That's what she's ashamed of. Bond is upset with her and how she could do something so bad, even though she didn't really know at the time what she was doing.
  • Safin's project started as an operation under SPECTRE. Ernst Stavro Blofeld knows this and that's why Bond has to speak to him in Hannibal Lecter mode to get information. Blofeld's probably barely in the movie.
  • Bond continually butts heads with Nomi because she's his replacement and he doesn't respect her yet. In typical fashion, being afraid of writing a compelling character that has nuance, she'll fall victim to the trope of "utterly perfect and annoyingly snarky at the main character to prove that she's a super strong independent woman who is better at him at everything he's ever done, follows the rules just like M wants, has a great relationship with Q and Moneypenny and Tanner, and they're all just super fond of her because she's not as insufferable as Bond." The audience will be basically told to like her, but if anyone comes out of the movie thinking she was a Mary Sue, they'll be called sexist and/or racist, instead of just preferring when characters have depth and aren't perfect.
  • Paloma is just an agent who Felix Leiter knows and recommends because Bond and company need to check stuff out in the area she's his best contact for. She's probably in a handful of scenes and I'd imagine she might be killed as the sacrificial lamb for one part of this, or she helps them with something and then promptly tells them this isn't her mission and they leave and don't see her for the rest of the film.
  • No idea about Logan Ash. I don't trust that he's not a villain, though. If he's framed as a hero, he'll be a double agent. It's not going to be Nomi.

Throughout the bulk of the story, they're going to realize that Safin's plan is to release this biological weapon to thin out the population and pull a Karl Stromberg / Hugo Drax style "save the world by getting rid of humans except for the chosen ones I've handpicked" setup. That's why Bond says in the trailer that if they don't do whatever dangerous mission it is, there will be no one left to save.

Why is Bond so adamantly trying to save the world, other than because he's a good guy and a hero? Because he has a secret that we've been alluding to the whole film that we still haven't revealed yet.

At the end of the movie, Nomi is incapacitated. She's not killed, but she's put out of commission, maybe by means of an injury, maybe she's tasked with guarding something or doing another objective, but she's not doing the main "kill Safin and directly stop the madman" part of the mission. She's working with Q and them, I guess. I don't know. The point is, this isn't Nomi's win, as Bond is the main character and he still should be the main hero, too.

Madeleine may very well die. These films in the Craig era love the tragedy angle. There's a solid chance Bond himself dies, too, or instead of Madeleine. However, as much as I think there's going to be a push to kill off Bond so Nomi can be 007 going forward and they'll try to make at least one movie focused entirely on her, if not just as an experiment where they act like it's a "buffer" before recasting a new James Bond, but to make it seem like they're appealing to the woke audience and undoing all the sexism of the series, blah blah, I do ultimately think they'll be smart enough not to actually kill off James Bond.

What I do think, however, is that we're getting a reveal that Bond has gone back into retirement in Jamaica because of that mysterious secret that they've teased the whole film. And here's where the big twist comes in.

Whether Madeleine is alive or not, Bond has chosen to go back into retirement because of the real Bond girl in the film—not Madeleine, not Paloma, not Nomi, not Moneypenny...but HIS DAUGHTER.

That's right. I'm predicting an Iron Man mixed with Barney Stinson from How I Met Your Mother scenario here. They'll make it so how in Skyfall, the main "Bond girl" was essentially M and the love was more of a mother/son relationship, while this one is more of a father/daughter love and she's the girl he ends up with at the finale, just playing with her and her toys or something. Rather than killing off the character or having him go into a retirement for a romantic love interest, wherein we know he wouldn't be comfortable just being a normal guy, he's found the emotional depth to be a father and that's the responsible thing to do, to keep her out of the life of the spy game and all.

That's what I'm expecting to happen, but what do you think?
Give your predictions and thoughts on my guesses in the comments below!

AUSTIN POWERS: THE SPY WHO SHAGGED ME Audio Commentary Track – FanTracks #49

Posted by Anthony Mango - Friday, September 24, 2021

As a spin-off of our A REVIEW TO A KILL series about the James Bond franchise, Fanboys Anonymous is providing you with another edition of the FanTracks podcast, this time for Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.

For copyright reasons, we cannot provide the movie itself, but after a short introduction, you will be told when to sync your copy of the film so you can following along with us and listen to our thoughts on the movie as we crack some jokes, expose plot holes, and discuss anything else that comes to our minds for commentary.

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me

Release Date: June 8, 1999
Directed by Jay Roach
Written by Mike Myers and Michael McCullers
Starring Mike Myers (Austin Powers / Dr. Evil / Fat Bastard), Heather Graham (Felicity Shagwell), Michael York (Basil Exposition), Robert Wagner (Number Two), Rob Lowe (Young Number Two), Seth Green (Scott Evil), Mindy Sterling (Frau Farbissina), Verne Troyer (Mini-Me) and Elizabeth Hurley (Vanessa Kensington)

In his second screen adventure, British super spy Austin Powers must return to 1969, as arch-nemesis Dr. Evil has ventured back to that year and successfully stolen Austin's "mojo" and set up a powerful laser and aimed it at Earth. With the help of gorgeous agent Felicity Shagwell, the newly single Austin must now not only contend with Dr. Evil, but also Evil's vicious, pint-size attack-clone, Mini-Me.

FanTracks Episode 49 hosted by Tony Mango along with Robert DeFelice and Callum Wiggins.

Make sure to subscribe/follow on whatever platform you're listening, leave your comments on the videos or this post, share this with your friends and geek out with us!


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FanTracks Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me audio commentary
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