

#Fantastic 4 silver surfer movie
The film is hardly any good, but it is at least watchable, not a thrilling effects ride Revenge of the Fallen calibre kind of way, but I could sit the whole way through, and though not thoroughly loving it, didn't have to force myself to not fall asleep or forget the movie was playing at all. Chris Evans (Captain America: The First Avenger, Push, Scott Pilgrim VS The World, Sunshine) was decent, particularly in his interactions with The Thing, and they got the same guy back to play Doctor Doom (although the writing of his character severely suffered in this instalment). There's not a lot to Rise of the Silver Surfer, and I think even fans of the not-much-better Fantastic 4 from 2005. Speaking of the beginning, the first third of the movie was definitely the best part of it, the last being the worst. There were a couple of gimmicks that were okay-ish, as seen above when The Human Torch and The Thing switch powers near the beginning. From memory I'm pretty sure watching this in cinemas was the first time I ever watched a film and didn't enjoy it at all (the only time since then being when I watched Eragon, although it's possible the two were the other way around, I can't recall). I'm not going to stay on this one for too long because of how terrible I find it. I can understand that there's some okay stuff that people would actually enjoy, but it's none of those things. That's not to say there's nothing good about it. Of course you'll also be a complete moron and should remove yourself from the gene-pool. If you're looking for the sort of movie that uses bad puns in a way that would make Freddy Kreuger blush, and aren't anywhere near as fun, the kind of movie that shoves half the worlds great monuments into one film, but can only bothered to have them be incredibly bad computer graphic replicas, a movie that would have the audacity to take a giant world eating humanoid and turn him into a cloud, then you'll love Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer.

This is the first Fox Marvel movie to be added to the streaming service. "The physicality comes out of that." Next challenge? Dialog.Rise of the Silver Surfer, where to even fucking begin with Rise of the Silver Surfer!? In case there's someone out there in the world who's not yet guessed, I don't like this movie. In a surprise addition to Disney+, the 20th Century Fox Marvel movie, Fantastic Four: Rise Of The Silver Surfer is now available to watch in the Netherlands.

"I try and keep my thumb on the soul of the character," he says. But it was Jones' dual performance in Pan's Labyrinth, as the titular talking faun and the palm-eyed Pale Man, that earned him celebrity cachet - and the film three Oscars. In 1997, director Guillermo Del Toro cast Jones as a humanoid cockroach in Mimic and, in 2004, as the seaweed-hued Abe Sapien in Hellboy. You don't know his face (see photo) or his voice (Jones is usually dubbed), but you know his, ahem, body of work: In the 1980s, the 6' 4", 140-pound contortionist was the shades-wearing moon in McDonald's "Mac Tonight" ads. Creature-actor Doug Jones, 46, is riding high as the man behind the film's lustrous, CG-enhanced villain (voiced by Laurence Fishburne) at a time when multimillion-dollar digitally derived characters are sending most prosthetics-wearing mortals to the unemployment line. Photograph by Gregg Segal A spandex-clad Jessica Alba may be what sells tickets to Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (out June 15), but it's the naked dude on the shortboard that will keep audiences on the edge of their seats.
