sogoodlooking
Joined Sep 2020
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.
Badges2
To learn how to earn badges, go to the badges help page.
Reviews209
sogoodlooking's rating
This junk was cobbled together from half a dozen failed scripts. The character looks 30, not 19. Only Han Solo Jr. Brings anything resembling acting chops to the game.
And her suit?
Jaysys, what a mess, ostensibly a heap of disjointed scraps that somehow have the shine and polish of a mint '59 Jag. You'd never build a prototype with that level of finish, since you're only designing in order to re-design. Why bother with ten coats of pain when you're not close to perfecting the work?
What would have been interesting if, instead of pointless scenes that don't build even one character meaningfully, they spent five minutes actually showing how a budding engineer works? Why not do that, so that the audience knows why things work the way they do. Instead we get a stream of scenes with no tempo, scenes that don't build to anything.
It's not hilariously bad, which at least would have made Ironheart interesting, but it is weak in every area, yet another installment in Disney+ endless output of tripe. I'd say it's a pity, but the premise is so flawed it was never going to work.
At this rate Disney will go bankrupt and take Marvel with it. That's a good thing since in 10-20 years it might result in a production based on the comics that reboots the stories intelligently, with actual heart.
And her suit?
Jaysys, what a mess, ostensibly a heap of disjointed scraps that somehow have the shine and polish of a mint '59 Jag. You'd never build a prototype with that level of finish, since you're only designing in order to re-design. Why bother with ten coats of pain when you're not close to perfecting the work?
What would have been interesting if, instead of pointless scenes that don't build even one character meaningfully, they spent five minutes actually showing how a budding engineer works? Why not do that, so that the audience knows why things work the way they do. Instead we get a stream of scenes with no tempo, scenes that don't build to anything.
It's not hilariously bad, which at least would have made Ironheart interesting, but it is weak in every area, yet another installment in Disney+ endless output of tripe. I'd say it's a pity, but the premise is so flawed it was never going to work.
At this rate Disney will go bankrupt and take Marvel with it. That's a good thing since in 10-20 years it might result in a production based on the comics that reboots the stories intelligently, with actual heart.
This junk was cobbled together from half a dozen failed scripts. The character looks 30, not 19. Only Han Solo Jr. Brings anything resembling acting chops to the game.
And her suit?
Jaysys, what a mess, ostensibly a heap of disjointed scraps that somehow have the shine and polish of a mint '59 Jag. You'd never build a prototype with that level of finish, since you're only designing in order to re-design. Why bother with ten coats of pain when you're not close to perfecting the work?
What would have been interesting if, instead of pointless scenes that don't build even one character meaningfully, they spent five minutes actually showing how a budding engineer works? Why not do that, so that the audience knows why things work the way they do. Instead we get a stream of scenes with no tempo, scenes that don't build to anything.
It's not hilariously bad, which at least would have made Ironheart interesting, but it is weak in every area, yet another installment in Disney+ endless output of tripe. I'd say it's a pity, but the premise is so flawed it was never going to work.
At this rate Disney will go bankrupt and take Marvel with it. That's a good thing since in 10-20 years it might result in a production based on the comics that reboots the stories intelligently, with actual heart.
And her suit?
Jaysys, what a mess, ostensibly a heap of disjointed scraps that somehow have the shine and polish of a mint '59 Jag. You'd never build a prototype with that level of finish, since you're only designing in order to re-design. Why bother with ten coats of pain when you're not close to perfecting the work?
What would have been interesting if, instead of pointless scenes that don't build even one character meaningfully, they spent five minutes actually showing how a budding engineer works? Why not do that, so that the audience knows why things work the way they do. Instead we get a stream of scenes with no tempo, scenes that don't build to anything.
It's not hilariously bad, which at least would have made Ironheart interesting, but it is weak in every area, yet another installment in Disney+ endless output of tripe. I'd say it's a pity, but the premise is so flawed it was never going to work.
At this rate Disney will go bankrupt and take Marvel with it. That's a good thing since in 10-20 years it might result in a production based on the comics that reboots the stories intelligently, with actual heart.
One of those shows with its collective head barely, BARELY above water. Even Jessica Green, who was the primary attraction in The Outpost, looks oddly reconstituted, a cheap copy of herself. It's frankly bizarre.
Everything feels slapped together:
The writing is the first draft that passed for tolerable, and someone said, "just film it, already."
The acting is as if five novices in Studio 102 in college were given a single sentence of character background, and were doing a table read, their first run of the script.
The stunts... oh, the stunts. Two actors (or one actor and a tennis ball standing in for CGI) play, badly, at swordfighting or physical assault, are shot messing around for five minutes, then that's cut down to about 15 incoherent seconds.
5 out of 10 is generous, as it's not really "barely acceptable." Make it 4 of 10.
Everything feels slapped together:
The writing is the first draft that passed for tolerable, and someone said, "just film it, already."
The acting is as if five novices in Studio 102 in college were given a single sentence of character background, and were doing a table read, their first run of the script.
The stunts... oh, the stunts. Two actors (or one actor and a tennis ball standing in for CGI) play, badly, at swordfighting or physical assault, are shot messing around for five minutes, then that's cut down to about 15 incoherent seconds.
5 out of 10 is generous, as it's not really "barely acceptable." Make it 4 of 10.