Geeks + Gamers › Forums › Search › Search Results for 'hawkeye review'
Disney Plus Hawkeye Series Episodes 1 & 2 Review
Dec 8, 2021
George The Giant Slayer
Disney Plus’ Hawkeye is the current live action show in the MCU television lineup. It came out of the gate appealing to everyday people and die hard fans’ affection for the grounded master archer. Only, to have Disney pull a boiler room pump and dump scam; convincing audiences that the show was centered around the original Jeremy Renner Hawkeye when in fact it focuses on Kate Bishop and passing the baton from Renner’s Hawkeye to her. This should have been called the Kate Bishop show and that would have set the proper expectations. But then no one would have shown up to watch the series.
This game Disney played is exactly why Hawkeye is the lowest rated series in the MCU live action family.
She had her breakthrough with the western drama film True Grit (2010), which earned her nominations for the Academy Award, BAFTA Award and the SAG Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Steinfeld rose to mainstream prominence for her lead roles in Ender’s Game (2013),
Seems like Hawkeye is not the main star in his own show. I came across a review of sorts here in New Zealand.
I discuss it here if you are interested in hearing about it. Cheers.
I have no problem with fans and what people watch. I never judge because we all grew up heavily on media. Vigilante was used in Arrow as well. “verisimilitude”
Marvel’s ‘HAWKEYE’ Trailer Review | BALLS DEEP into the M-She-U!
Nerdrotic Daily
For me, Gary is a lot of fun to listen to. Agree about being built or yoked, but it depends. I took an archery class once and there was a moose of a lady there who was a great shot with her compound bow, but she looked almost like a shot putter. Big woman. Attractive, but huge. In sports, some of the athletes look like normal people, so you can never really tell by body type.
Also, I thought that masculinity was covered well in first season of Arrow. At around the same time, Agents of SHIELD was going on, and Grant Ward was treated the same way as Oliver Queen in terms of their rite of passage to masculinity. In both shows, the men had to become survivalists in remote nature locations. They had to learn how to hunt and trap and defend themselves like animals. In nature, you kill what you eat and you have to do it yourself. Those two shows had real masculinity