I love that he's a walking parody played so straight that even being the straight man is a nod to bad paladin tropes.One thing they got wrong, Paladins don’t steal.
But in the movie the Paladin steals every scene.![]()
I love that he's a walking parody played so straight that even being the straight man is a nod to bad paladin tropes.One thing they got wrong, Paladins don’t steal.
But in the movie the Paladin steals every scene.![]()
Same, though the Tabaxi looked a little too plushy for my taste.I like the practical nature of the effects. Not CGI'ing everything, there's a earthiness to the non-human creatures.
I would have let that slide if they actually spoke. Every other language in the movie is subtitled, but Tabaxi just purr and grumble.Same, though the Tabaxi looked a little too plushy for my taste.
Sounds like most cats of my acquaintance.but Tabaxi just purr and grumble.
I mean admittedly, it sounds like me, but still.Sounds like most cats of my acquaintance.
The Tabaxi looked a little too close to this viral cat costume:I would have let that slide if they actually spoke. Every other language in the movie is subtitled, but Tabaxi just purr and grumble.
I gave up on the purring long ago. All I do now is grumble.I mean admittedly, it sounds like me, but still.
That's what halflings were like in the 1980's Dragon illustrations: well-proportioned small people.
Remember this? View attachment 281395
I think one of the big issues with the Bradley Cooper scene is that he was a last minute replacement of the original actor and shot the scene by himself on a green screen and then was superimposed into the scene. I'd also say that in LotR, the hobbit scenes where they're mixing with big folk got a lot worse in the last film (like when they're dancing on tables after the battle of Helms Deep) when they were doing that instead of using practical lens effects.One thing that struck me is that the movie's halflings were just sort of tossed in as just a bunch of small people. Whereas LOTR made sure to establish the signature look of them (curly hair, big furry feet, waistcoats, etc.) so that even if none of the big folk were around, you still knew you were looking at a hobbit.
Granted, the D&D movie didn't have the same time to dedicate to a couple of minor characters, but with D&D having moved away from the hobbity look of halflings, without those visual touchstones, we run into them just looking like small humans.