Variety: The scenery ain’t bad but the laughs are tumbleweed-sparse in “The Ridiculous 6,” a Western sendup so lazy and aimless, it barely qualifies as parody. Although this (twice) studio-ditched production was dogged by controversy earlier this year, when about a dozen Native American cast members walked off the set in protest, the jokes here are less Apache than just plain patchy, too witless even to rise to the level of giving offense. Netflix has the exclusive and dubious honor of lobbing Adam Sandler’s latest quasi-comic excretion at the masses, and the movie’s crude, orifice-driven gags and equal-opportunity stereotyping should lasso a fair number of undiscriminating eyeballs in streaming play. Viewers who found “A Million Ways to Die in the West” too intellectually taxing should lap it up.
Since "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" ended in 2003, some members of its cast have found success on screens big and small. Others haven't fared as well.
Agatha All Along has wrapped up on Disney+, just in time for Halloween 2024. Starring and expanding on Kathryn Hahn’s excellent character in the outstanding WandaVision, Agatha All Along is a trippy tale that’s full of mystery and suspense, with a light dash of horror thrown in for good measure. Surprisingly, it also features many “firsts” for an MCU project. To dissect and discuss it all, RPadTV hosts Raymond Padilla conjured longtime videogame journalists Paul Semel for this review video.
Raymond Padilla and Paul Semel will talk about what they liked and didn’t like about Agatha All Along, as well as what it means for the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The two will discuss various performances, moments, surprises, and more. This conversation will contain many spoilers, so be sure to cast a protection spell if you want to avoid them.
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