Yes, that's John C. McGinley (Dr. Cox from Scrubs) as Metallo. There are actually a decent number of guest stars in this one (I watched it earlier today), but it wasn't great. Not bad, but not great.
@Belabras ate my dingo!: I didn't watch that series- I didn't like a lot of the character designs (esp. the Joker) and it was geared for a younger audience (and there's nothing wrong with that) but I like the look of that more than "Public Enemies".
S/B PE movie is a programmed product designed to wrap young minds and geeky fanboys to embrace evil one-world government, women who must have big breasts, and false-flag events generated to distract the public from being financially looted and plundered by the government officials. That is what the movie really about.
After reading this article I kept thinking Marvel's Civil War meets Marvel's Dark Reign. That being said I'd still at the very least rent it since Kevin Conroy's Batman.
@Xsuit: Public Enemies proceeds both, and as far as a hero vs. hero, government outlawed heroes story goes, Civil War and Dark Reign are far superior and nowhere near as nonsensical.
@AtomicTao: Well you can't really compare the two stories.
Public Enemies was just a 6 issue Batman/Superman storyline that had Batman and Supes fighting everyone else. The story was pretty much self-contained/disposable; with the exception dethroning Luthor it had no significant impact on the DC universe or canon thereafter (thank god).
Civil War was a much more epic storyline that overran the entire Marvel universe for a year and pitted the the entire MU against each other, and has changed the direction of every single series.
The only real similarities between the two is that their premises relied on reducing every character into a complete moron/a-hole. Especially the general population of the worlds they took place on.
Seriously, if you find yourself AGAINST Captain America or Superman, you should probably realize that you're doing it wrong.
While DC didn't let PE turn into a Civil War-scale linewide clusterfuck, I've been noticing shades of 'instant universal stupidity' creeping back into the current Superman 'New Krypton' storyline which features the whole wide world once again turning against him.
I'll wait till my roomate torrents it. Honestly, an hour-long film isn't worth the slot on my netflix queue, to say anything of a purchase.
Besides, I've got Terminator:SCC Season 2 on bluray to keep me occupied for awhile. I'm sad to see so many reviewers negative reactions to this film though. Its an interesting concept, and I'd be lying if I said I haven't been looking forward to it's release for some time.
When you have a storyline as asinine as the original Public Enemies to begin with, you're already fighting an uphill battle.
Jeph Loeb is not a writer who carefully builds on the continuity set by his predecessors, tweaking and retconning as necessary to keep the balance between what has gone before and doing something new.
He's a writer who takes that continuity and pounds it clumsily into the shape he needs. That's the only way to explain the superheroes practically unquestioning obedience to a dude who has in the past flown around in an armored battle-suit and shot death rays at their faces.
@templepriest: Hey, do you realize how few Kryptonians there are out there in the universe? We're talkin' about the continuation of the species! Sacrifices must be made!
Now hand me that Kryptonian ballgag. The safe word is "Kltpzyxm."
@John Hazard: Green Arrow Made a comment when Supergirl commented that the Galatea(Power Girl) clone was just like her. "Well there are some differences, btu I see what you mean" or something like that.
@templepriest: For the record, it's his universal counterpart's cousin, not his own. If he was commenting on Supergirl's breasts, then you could go ahead with the Ew.
I think Lex Luthors ascension to Presidency was handled really well and made a lot of sense in the comics.
The only problematic part of that character arc was the resolution that Jeph Loeb wrote for it, which made absolutely no sense and, of course, threw out everything everyone before him had built up so nicely.
@omgwtflolbbqbye: One of many problems, as Superman as a Public Enemy right after Worlds at War was like trying to paint MacArthur or Patton as a traitor right after WWII. And Luthor, the biggest control freak on earth becoming a deranged drug addict also made zero sense, clearly upsetting Bendis so much he decided to do the whole Luthor storyline over again at Marvel with Norman Osborn.
@omgwtflolbbqbye: Agreed. Luthor was a perfectionist and and overachiever, and one of the best things about when he became President was his whole 'I am the best at everything else, so I'm going to be the best President, EVER'.
And then Jeph Loeb put him in power armor and had him throw it all away.
@phoenix6666:
[spoilers]
Metallo fights him, is melted by Captain Atom, and Superman's framed for his murder under the excuse that the Kryptonite meteor's radiation is messing with his head.
@Charax: Wow, I must have missed that part in the comic. Only part with Metallo I remember was at the graveyard in the beginning of the first issue....need to go back and re-read it.
Props for featuring Ultraman. I rented the entire original series from Netflix (old DVD set) and I was surprised how much fun I had. I actually had watched the English dub on TV as a wee tot, and for the DVDs I watched with Japanese audio and subtitles. Since the dub was a pretty faithful translation, the stories were familiar. And as an adult I know that in the episode where Ultraman fights what looks like Godzilla, it actually IS the Godzilla suit (so ... I guess it's a cameo? :)
I've mentioned on here a few weeks ago that I'd be willing to add more straight sci-fi to my Netflix Horror, Exploit, and Cult cinema new release lists if you guys were going to use them, but never go an answer. I'll throw the idea out there again just in case.
As it stands, I've carried those list out to Nov. As titles are added to the NF database, I'll add them. just click to see what's doin': [www.netflix.com]
09/29/09
The plotting was totally inane and driven by the fact that everyone Superman or Batman acted out of character/ idiotic.
The voice acting was excellent though, and the action/fight scenes were very well animated and directed.
Also they managed to keep the sexual/romantic tension between Superman and Batman intact too.
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/29/09
09/30/09
09/30/09
I thought they should have kept Hamill as the voice of the Joker, but otherwise I really liked all the character redesigns. Ah well.
09/23/09
09/23/09
09/22/09
09/22/09
And this is from a died-in-the-wool DC guy.
09/22/09
Public Enemies was just a 6 issue Batman/Superman storyline that had Batman and Supes fighting everyone else. The story was pretty much self-contained/disposable; with the exception dethroning Luthor it had no significant impact on the DC universe or canon thereafter (thank god).
Civil War was a much more epic storyline that overran the entire Marvel universe for a year and pitted the the entire MU against each other, and has changed the direction of every single series.
The only real similarities between the two is that their premises relied on reducing every character into a complete moron/a-hole. Especially the general population of the worlds they took place on.
Seriously, if you find yourself AGAINST Captain America or Superman, you should probably realize that you're doing it wrong.
While DC didn't let PE turn into a Civil War-scale linewide clusterfuck, I've been noticing shades of 'instant universal stupidity' creeping back into the current Superman 'New Krypton' storyline which features the whole wide world once again turning against him.
09/22/09
Besides, I've got Terminator:SCC Season 2 on bluray to keep me occupied for awhile. I'm sad to see so many reviewers negative reactions to this film though. Its an interesting concept, and I'd be lying if I said I haven't been looking forward to it's release for some time.
09/22/09
Jeph Loeb is not a writer who carefully builds on the continuity set by his predecessors, tweaking and retconning as necessary to keep the balance between what has gone before and doing something new.
He's a writer who takes that continuity and pounds it clumsily into the shape he needs. That's the only way to explain the superheroes practically unquestioning obedience to a dude who has in the past flown around in an armored battle-suit and shot death rays at their faces.
09/22/09
Please tell me it was Superman. Please please pleasepleaseplease
09/22/09
09/22/09
They are from Krypton; not Alabama!
09/22/09
Supergirl: "Omg she looks just like me!"
Ollie: "Yea except more... developed."
09/22/09
09/22/09
Now hand me that Kryptonian ballgag. The safe word is "Kltpzyxm."
09/23/09
09/23/09
09/23/09
09/23/09
09/22/09
The only problematic part of that character arc was the resolution that Jeph Loeb wrote for it, which made absolutely no sense and, of course, threw out everything everyone before him had built up so nicely.
09/22/09
09/22/09
And then Jeph Loeb put him in power armor and had him throw it all away.
09/22/09
President Luthor was developing so many shades of grey it's really a shame that Loeb had to fuck it up.
I think Azarrelo's and Bermejo's "Lex Luthor: Man of Steel"mini-series managed to capitalize on all these same nuanced possibilities afterwards.
09/22/09
09/22/09
[spoilers]
Metallo fights him, is melted by Captain Atom, and Superman's framed for his murder under the excuse that the Kryptonite meteor's radiation is messing with his head.
It's precisely as lame as it sounds.
09/22/09
09/23/09
09/22/09
Batty would be the one wearing Flava Flav's clock.
09/15/09
09/13/09
As it stands, I've carried those list out to Nov. As titles are added to the NF database, I'll add them. just click to see what's doin': [www.netflix.com]