I've not seen this summer's giant robot-fest, so I can't evaluate that performance; but Elba was very much bland in the Alien prequel that wasn't an Alien prequel, but then was one after all (not that he was the only problem there, granted).
Ah, OK. From what you've already said, it doesn't sound like he would've been up for my barrage of questions about the politics which led to the future's mecha gladiator battlefields anyway.
If anything, it had too many surprises for me. Surprises, like "jump" scares in one of the finer horror movies, succeed when they don't arrive in an endless stream. That's just wearying to me. Detention packed so many incidents on top of each other I found it difficult to connect with anyone or anything beyond the most superficial level. It was like it was trying to use the Airplane! gag rate approach - "Didn't like the last thing? Here's another one! And another!" It worked for that film because, apart from the hilarity, there was at least a basic premise established - a foundation, however loose, for the anarchy. Detention didn't seem to have that.
Detention was the cinematic equivalent of a Max Landis monologue, which is perhaps the most succinct explanation available for my negative reaction to the film.
Originally posted by Anderson
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Originally posted by Ben Thomas
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Detention was the cinematic equivalent of a Max Landis monologue, which is perhaps the most succinct explanation available for my negative reaction to the film.
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