I'm Batman! 🦇
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I'm Batman! 🦇
@Moneyspyder_iam
***bio under construction *** #restorethesnyderverse #restoretheayercut
Cincinnati, OH Katılım Eylül 2017
602 Takip Edilen504 Takipçiler
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi

In 2001, Nicolas Cage sat down with Sam Raimi to discuss playing the Green Goblin in Spider-Man. He passed on the role to make Adaptation with Spike Jonze instead.
Before he left the conversation, he told Raimi something. He said whoever you cast as Spider-Man, let him do one scene where he is crawling around like a spider when he is alone. Let the audience see the arachnid body language, just for a moment.
Raimi cast Willem Dafoe. The Green Goblin became one of the most iconic villain performances in superhero film history. Cage made Adaptation, earned an Oscar nomination, and never entered the Spider-Man universe.
Twenty-four years later, his first television role is Spider-Noir. He plays a 1930s private investigator with spider powers, and the creative choice he built the character around is that the man is a spider pretending to be a person. The arachnid DNA is inside him, and the performance is about watching him try to reprogram his humanity.
He is playing the exact idea he pitched to Raimi in 2001, for the character he turned down, in a different corner of the same universe, in the medium he spent his entire career refusing to work in.
The Breaking Bad detail is the hinge. His son showed him the series during COVID, and what changed his mind was watching Bryan Cranston stare at a suitcase for what felt like minutes. Cage realized he could not look away, and that the thing he was watching was simply impossible in a two-hour film.
The suitcase scene convinced him that television could give an actor the one thing he had never had in forty years of movies: time to let a performance breathe.
Anthony Hopkins wrote Cranston a handwritten letter after watching Breaking Bad, calling it the best acting he had ever seen. One scene of a man staring at luggage quietly rerouted a forty-year film career into a different medium and a different Spider-Man universe.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic
Nicolas Cage says he was completely against doing television until his son showed him BREAKING BAD during COVID. Watching Bryan Cranston silently stare at a suitcase for minutes made Cage realize TV gives actors something movies rarely can: time. “I thought, maybe with an eight-hour narrative, I can start planting seeds for a character that can bloom into something that I don’t have the luxury of time to do in a movie.”
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I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi

Such a special moment when first I saw this in the Summer of 1977. A major part of my life for many years after. One of my sons existed because of this movie. Now I prefer not to think of it and mostly pretend the relationship never existed. Thanks @Disney
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I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi

With THE MANDALORIAN AND GROGU in theaters, scratching that pulpy Lucasfilm adventure itch, I have been thinking a lot about INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF DESTINY as it approaches its third anniversary.
People were way too harsh on this movie.
I understand why audiences may have been hesitant. Set leaks involving Roman soldiers made people nervous about the time-travel element, while the usual culture-war crowd spent months insisting Helena was going to replace Indy by the end of the movie.
That obviously did not happen.
What we actually got was one final adventure with a man who spent his entire life trying to understand history, only to reach the end and realize he no longer understood where he fit into it.
That is what made the movie work for me.
Indy does not know he is going on a time-travel adventure at the beginning. He is just an old man who has lost too much, feels left behind by the modern world, and gets pulled into another hunt for an artifact.
Then, at the end, he finally gets the one thing he has chased his entire life: the chance to actually live inside history.
And he wants to stay there.
I also love how much it feels like a spiritual companion to TEMPLE OF DOOM. It is strange, pulpy, darker than people expected, and far more emotional than it was given credit for.
By the time Marion walks back into that apartment at the end, I was tearing up like crazy.
Was it the financial hit Disney wanted? No.
But as a final Indiana Jones adventure, I think *Dial of Destiny* is quite wonderful.
I really wish more people had given it a fair chance.




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@RetroMoviesDB The only season of Family Matters worth watching, pity Cameron got all fuddy duddy over her...Julie McCullough.

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I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi

True friendship is not always about the big public moments people see online.
Sometimes it’s about quietly standing beside someone when life becomes unbearably difficult.
According to reports, Johnny Depp quietly allowed Eric Dane to stay rent free in one of his Los Angeles homes during the final stage of Dane’s battle with ALS.
Sources claimed the Grey’s Anatomy actor had been living in one of Depp’s properties above the Sunset Strip, with Depp telling him to pay whatever he could, or nothing at all if he wasn’t able to.
Insiders said Depp simply wanted to ease the financial pressure while Dane focused on his health.
The two actors reportedly became friends through mutual connections years earlier, and Depp’s gesture gave Dane peace of mind during a time when his condition was rapidly worsening.
Dane publicly revealed his ALS diagnosis in April 2025.
By June, the disease had progressed dramatically. In an emotional interview with Diane Sawyer on Good Morning America, he explained that the left side of his body was still functioning while the right side had completely stopped working.
He admitted the disease was advancing so quickly that he feared he could soon lose the use of his left hand as well, calling the reality “sobering.”
As the illness progressed, Dane became heavily dependent on constant care. His ex wife Rebecca Gayheart revealed he required round the clock nursing support with 21 care shifts every week.
Despite everything, Dane continued doing what he loved. He kept filming the final season of Euphoria and also worked on Amazon’s series Countdown during the summer. In interviews, he said being at work made him feel alive and helped keep his spirit positive even while his body was failing.
After his passing on February 19 at age 53, his family shared that he spent his final days surrounded by close friends, his devoted wife, and his two daughters, Billie and Georgia. They also said Dane became deeply committed to raising awareness and support for ALS research throughout his journey, hoping to help others facing the same disease.
Reports additionally claimed Depp had offered similar support to Mickey Rourke after Rourke reportedly faced financial struggles and eviction issues, though sources say Rourke did not accept the offer.
In a world where kindness is often performed publicly for attention, this story stood out because it was quiet.
No cameras, no announcements, no spotlight. Just one friend trying to make another person’s final chapter a little less heavy.

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I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi
I'm Batman! 🦇 retweetledi

@AussieManH1 @esdraxus Superman has killed in the comics and movie brah
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@esdraxus That’s because Superman is not meant to kill mate. I know Batman is not meant to kill either but in some iterations and most iterations he has. So I’ve genuinely no idea what you’re on about.
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Superman mata a un Kryptoniano en MoS y hasta la fecha sigue siendo un escándalo.
Batman mata a un Kryptoniano en The Flush y "mire que guay".
Hipócritas.
🌟KARZ🌹🕊️@karzkid6
No one talk about Michael Keaton Batman Killing a kryptonian 🎥😱🔥
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