Some things just go together perfectly, like peanut butter and jelly, pie with coffee and cherry, and Nathan Fillion and Jameseims Gun. The Canadian-American actor and American writer/director/co-executive director of DC Studios has been working together on all types of projects, including a recent blow to Gun's big screen for his Superman universe. In "Superman", written and directed by Gunn, Filion is played by Green Fener Guy Gardner, a very different version of DC's hero than the one who many fans know and want, Hull Jordandan. (Filion has previously expressed Jordandan In more animated films with straight-to-home-media DC, but the role in live at the time went to his former co-star of "Two Boys and Girl", Ryan Reynolds instead.)
In fact, Filion is starring in a number of Gun projects than for each, save perhaps on Gun's own brother, John Gun, going to the 2005 director's debut, "Slitter". "Slitter" is a brutally violent horror comedy For someone else's invasion of a small town in South Carolina and Filion he plays the local Sheriff, Bill Pardi. Together with the mayor of the city (Greg Henry), a local teenager named Kylie (Tania Saulnja) and the Sweet -School of Pardie's high school students, St. Starla (Elizabeth Banks), was doing her best to fight the disgusting invasion. To worsen things, they are guided by a foreign and mutated version of Starla's husband, Grant Grant (Michael Rucker). "Slitter" has romantic elements of comedy, some surprising moments of "King Kong"-who sympathize with the monster, and more gross output than you can shake a stick. Also, it is the beginning of the beautiful partnership of Fillon and Gun on Gun, and we are better for it.
Slither shows what both Gun and Fillion so great
"Slitter" is an incredible exhibition of the unique tone that Gun has fulfilled over the years, stirring a lot of heart, cruel comedy and some serious horror to tell stories that are both deeply specific and somehow universal. Gun films almost always tell stories For the found families who survived an impossible chance, and "Slitter" is really the plan. As the survivors of the city of Wheelssy gather, they develop a kind of kinship with each other that feels like (fast and brutally forged) family, and a mixture of rough humor and sardon wit are well balanced with the hardcore horror. Fillion plays perfectly on his own sarcastic strengths, delivering the drier lines of Gun with the real edge of the irony, while every person and deficiency but a relative hero still managed to be loved. (Seriously, a few things are easier to understand than Sheriff Pardi see a bunch of people who join the grant of mutant grants, ala, avoiding "society" and walking, "Good, now it's some f ***** to ***." Yes, Bill, it certainly is.)
While "Slitter" is likely to be too happy for many fans who have discovered Gun through his films "Guardians of the Galaxy", feels perfect in accordance with the rest of his Overe, even his great DC continued the team "Suicide Suicide" team. Indeed, there is basically a straight line from "Slitter" to "suicide composition" In terms of humor, topics and especially tone, and the best part is for both of them. In fact, most Gun films do it, and that rules.
Gun and Fillion are a competition made in the cinema sky
Filion and Gan worked together a bit of "Slitter", with their collaborations, including everything from the short series of Gun on Gun, who deceived the trophies of pornography, "Pgjames Gun, PG Porn", to the Galaxy Keepers. He is a Bible -based superhero, the Holy Refugees in "Super", had a cinema in the first two films "Guardians", played Master Caria in "Guardians of Galaxy Tom 3", "Separation of the child in the" suicide composition ", and now Guy Guardner. There are To love a lot in Gun's "Superman" Former Fillion's earlier collaborations and it is likely that the two will continue to work together in the future in a certain capacity.
Overall, there are many Great partnerships with director-acter There, but for my money, I will always root for Gun and Fillion. It is guaranteed to bring laughter, some shocks and very heart (even when Fillion plays totally unusual.)
Superman is currently playing in theaters.
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