• The upgrade to XenForo 2.3.7 has now been completed. Please report any issues to our administrators.

Guardians of the Galaxy James Gunn is directing Guardians of the Galaxy!

I listened to that yesterday - It's great.

The problem with Gunn is that he's so uptight & dull ;)
 
Interview's awesome and funny so far. Love Gunn talking about the absurd "Glen Close" set photos the paparazzi took and sold, haha

About 40 minutes in they stop talking GOTG and move onto other stuff, but keep listening, as he comes back round to Guardians at the end, and it's actually a little moving how passionate about the project Gunn is.
 
My revisiting of the James Gunn back catalogue on Letterboxd continued with Super. Here's what I had to say about it:




Still as magnificent on second viewing. If SLITHER is the film that first marked out James Gunn as a writer/director to watch, SUPER stands as his masterpiece. But I still feel it's kinda promoted the wrong way. It's often presented as a low-budget KICK-ASS, when not only is it a better film, but it's actually quite a different beast. While KICK-ASS is about a normal kid who becomes a superhero, SUPER is about a disturbed individual having a spectacular nervous breakdown, which manifests itself in the form of him donning a homemade superhero costume and assaulting criminals. If anything, it's almost like a much better version of SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK: a man suffering from a severe mental disorder Isis fixated on winning back his wife, and he pairs up with a similarly afflicted woman to concoct a crazy plan to do just that, only for him to learn something surprising about himself and who his true love may be in the process.

The performances in this are uniformly excellent. Rainn Wilson has never been better than here as Frank Darbo, AKA "The Crimson Bolt", a role that a lesser actor could have portrayed as more broadly comedic and toothless. But Wilson brings a darker edge to the role, and underneath the undeniable laughs shows us someone who has a great sadness at his core that makes for some surprisingly moving moments, particularly at the end. Elsewhere in the cast, this could be my favourite ever Ellen Page role, as comic book shop clerk Libby, who idolises Frank and becomes the Crimson Bolt's manic sidekick. She has some of the funniest moments in the film, and for an actress who some dismiss as aloof and reserved due to some of her more well known parts, she cuts loose and is clearly having a blast. Liv Tyler has a smaller role as Frank's wayward wife, but brings nuance to the part, making her someone more complex than a prize that Frank simply has to "get back." Kevin Bacon is as fab as he usually is, playing a total sleazeball with relish. James Gunn regulars Gregg Henry and Michael Rooker return, respectively as a cop who I wanted to see more of, and as a henchman who seems to have this whole backstory of caring about Liv Tyler's Sarah and maybe not being an entirely bad guy that is never really acknowledged in the script and only brought to life by Rooker's performance. Just so much great acting in this film.

Funnily enough, the film never feels like it's parodying superheroes, even in the hilarious sequences featuring Nathan Fillion playing Christian-themed TV hero The Holy Avenger. Any of the bizarre antics The Crimson Bolt engages in are framed in a way that it informs Frank's character and says something about him rather than, "Boy, aren't superheroes goofy?" And so you get that Edgar Wright like quality I've mentioned before where, come the violent, aciton-packed third act, you actually find yourself really buying into and emotionally investing in this film as a superhero movie, in spite of a whole film's worth of showing us how utterly unqualified for the role Frank is. But you just can't help but be drawn in, so exhilerating is that final showdown.

A really excellent film, and one that doesn't really get enough credit. I'd call it one of the finest comedies of recent years, but to be honest I'm not sure it's even a comedy, so much as a drama with some hilarious moments. Brilliantly acted, masterfully written and directed by James Gunn, this is a movie I can see myself returning to again and again, and I can only see its stature growing with repeat viewings.
 
I have such high hopes for this. I love listening to James Gunn's passion when he talks about the film. Plus, his knowledge of the comics and love for them makes it so much better.
 
Oh man, thank you Keyser Soze, I really dig Super but I never knew how to describe it to people to get them to watch it. "Dwight decides to be Batman with Juno as Robin" never quite cuts it for some reason.
 
Oh man, thank you Keyser Soze, I really dig Super but I never knew how to describe it to people to get them to watch it. "Dwight decides to be Batman with Juno as Robin" never quite cuts it for some reason.

Haha, thanks. We gotta spread the love for this film! :woot:
 
i liked that movie..but now it happens that i mix it up with god bless america....
 
Gunn and Bobcat Goldthwait are actually friends iirc, their tones and senses of humor sort of lean toward each other. Though Goldthwait's stuff is more grounded and revels in the sadness a bit more from what I've seen. And God Bless America was solid, but World's Greatest Dad is awesome.
 
Did anyone catch james on Adam carolla today? He said if GOG is successful he is making the sequel, and he isn't as bland as he usually is in interviews. Good listen.
 
Did anyone catch james on Adam carolla today? He said if GOG is successful he is making the sequel, and he isn't as bland as he usually is in interviews. Good listen.

Any chance of a link to the interview?
 
Are there any spoilers in that interview? I want to listen but I don't want anything ruined for me.
 
No, they hardly talk about the movie itself -- more the process of him coming onboard and the transition from low-budget filmmaking to big-budget.
 
Shoot me now. I turned on that stupid podcast, with no means of fast-forwarding through it, and listened to near a freaking hour of juvenile humour and home improvement tips.... them constantly saying "James Gunn is coming up in just a minute, but first this..." and "James Gunn is hear and we're about to talk to him, but first a word from our sponsors." And FINALLY, after an hour that felt like 100 years, James Gunn is introduced. I get as far as "Welcome to the show, James!"/"Good to be here," and the browser crashes. I open it up, and the only option is to start over. FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU...
 
Shoot me now. I turned on that stupid podcast, with no means of fast-forwarding through it, and listened to near a freaking hour of juvenile humour and home improvement tips.... them constantly saying "James Gunn is coming up in just a minute, but first this..." and "James Gunn is hear and we're about to talk to him, but first a word from our sponsors." And FINALLY, after an hour that felt like 100 years, James Gunn is introduced. I get as far as "Welcome to the show, James!"/"Good to be here," and the browser crashes. I open it up, and the only option is to start over. FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU...
All according to plan.


tumblr_n7sl93CGBd1rifp7go1_400.gif



tumblr_n7sgr2dm1C1snr7djo1_500.gif
 
Shoot me now. I turned on that stupid podcast, with no means of fast-forwarding through it, and listened to near a freaking hour of juvenile humour and home improvement tips.... them constantly saying "James Gunn is coming up in just a minute, but first this..." and "James Gunn is hear and we're about to talk to him, but first a word from our sponsors." And FINALLY, after an hour that felt like 100 years, James Gunn is introduced. I get as far as "Welcome to the show, James!"/"Good to be here," and the browser crashes. I open it up, and the only option is to start over. FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU...

That's weird. I was able to skip through until I found the right part.
 
I've never really liked any of Gunn's films. So I was extremely surprised at how well he handled the film. He did a fantastic job!
 
I had only seen one Gunn film before: Super. I hate that film, so for him to have directed one of my favourite films of all time, Guardians of the Galaxy, is a weird and extremely nice surprise for me. Now I can't imagine anyone else handeling the GotG franchise, and IF GotG meets Avengers in a film, Gunn HAS to be majorly involved.
 
Now I can't imagine anyone else handeling the GotG franchise, and IF GotG meets Avengers in a film, Gunn HAS to be majorly involved.
Yeah, I really feel like a film that features the GotG and Avengers meeting for the first time ought to be written by both Gunn and Whedon, regardless of who directs.
 
I've never really liked any of Gunn's films. So I was extremely surprised at how well he handled the film. He did a fantastic job!

I love Slither and especially Super, and so him knocking this out of the park was no surprise for me. While I love Guardians of the Galaxy most of all his films, it shares a lot of thematic DNA with Super: both are ostensibly goofy, fun films which at their core are surprisingly moving stories about damaged, hurting people finding each other.
 
Last edited:

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"