semantics, but I dont think they would say he is handsome, they might find him attractive, but attraction to someone is not the same thing as them being pretty.
He indeed stands out, he reminds me of that alien from what is it, family guy.
@Sifhraven beauty is about the most subjective thing out there. people finding him attractive is what makes him a handsome person. there is not objective handsomeness.
He looks better as Dr. Strange. I also think Paltrow looks better as Pepper Potts than she does in the selected picture. Hiddleston looks better as Loki, Jackson looks better without the beard, Rudd looks the same all the time, and I like Johansson better as a redhead.
If that makes you feel better about your life, you try and convince yourself of that. Leave Benedict to his plentiful admirers which obviously must be much less than yours.
I always knew that being a complete and total nerdgirl would pay off someday, and look at me now!! I'd like to dedicate this proud achievement (5/5!) to the memory of my dad, who gave me the money to buy my first comic book, my husband, who takes me to every premier without complaint, and Chris Evans, for being such a hottie. I'd also like to thank the members of the Academ— {orchestra music swells, officials drag her offstage}
As stated the instructions, this isn't intended to be comprehensive. Considering the sheer number of people involved it would be impossible. A lot of other secondary actors (Stan, Douglas, Serkis, Lily, Favreau, Smulders, Hopkins, Freeman...) and even some of the main ones like Chadwick Boseman aren't featured either.
I just updated my increasingly unwieldy Actors Who Have Played Multiple Comic Book Characters quiz. I predict that within 10 years this quiz will grow to include every working actor in Hollywood. Thought you guys might enjoy it.
I don't think you should have Tom Hardy. Like @Yesse03 mentioned above he's only in 5 seconds of a post-credit scene in Spider-Man: No Way Home which only half counts as an MCU film. Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield were in that movie far more if you wanted to use a non original MCU character.
Oh, I get it! It's funny because comic books are automatically for children, and therefore movies based on comic books are automatically for children, even if they're aimed at adults and have a rating that prevents children from watching them.
I don't get the whole part of the MCU / not part of the MCU situation and why people get so upset about the classifications. The teaser for a non MCU film in the credits of a MCU film is not good enough? Forget about the movies that were made cause they're not MCU.
I don't think it's particularly valid but I think I get it. It's like, "if the subject of a quiz is X, then it's 'fair' to include questions you can answer by knowing X, not other things."
For example (a more extreme example to illustrate), if it's supposed to be a quiz about "Star Wars species", then it's not "fair" to ask about the E.T. aliens, even though technically they appear in a kind of cameo in a scene in one of the movies. Or if it's a quiz about European geography, it's not "fair" to ask about Cyprus.
The second thing is that knowing the boundaries of the subject is part of the quiz. So if you're quizzing "Disney Princesses", part of knowing that subject is being familiar with its trivia, like knowing that Tinkerbell isn't one and Mulan is.
In the comics, Captain Marvel was a kree named Mar-Vell and died later on. Carol then took up the mantle getting Cosmic Energy abilities and then became the more iconic one for the role.
In the MCU, Captain Marvel has only been Carol Danvers.
He indeed stands out, he reminds me of that alien from what is it, family guy.
people can be pretty without being hot, yk? generally not a wonderful idea to say someone is seriously ugly because that's quite hurtful to anybody
i think perhaps he means that there are so many parodies on his name, that it is hard to remember which one was the real one again..
Maybe someone puts a u instead of the e but it's super easy otherwise.
For example (a more extreme example to illustrate), if it's supposed to be a quiz about "Star Wars species", then it's not "fair" to ask about the E.T. aliens, even though technically they appear in a kind of cameo in a scene in one of the movies. Or if it's a quiz about European geography, it's not "fair" to ask about Cyprus.
The second thing is that knowing the boundaries of the subject is part of the quiz. So if you're quizzing "Disney Princesses", part of knowing that subject is being familiar with its trivia, like knowing that Tinkerbell isn't one and Mulan is.
In the MCU, Captain Marvel has only been Carol Danvers.