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Night Shyamalan’s long-awaited finale his Unbreakable trilogy is now here, and as the last chapter of the saga, Glass brings things to a decisive end. One small but important early reveal of ...
Watching Glass is like going to the movies with that one friend who cannot help leaning over to whisper one banal observation after another into your ear, and then leaning back satisfied that he's ...
Night Shyamalan Wasn't Allowed To Mention Comics While Promoting Unbreakable Unbreakable is very much a superhero movie but it sure ... made it clear that Mr. Glass is a pretty complex fellow ...
There is the suggestion within the film that Dunn and Price are ... is a result of not having the sacred texts of comic books to go by. Once Glass finds Dunn, Price, and Crumb institutionalized ...
“Glass” continues the saga, only this time stripped of any sense of revelation. We are now, if anything, oversaturated with comic-book films, so in theory the time is right for a movie like ...
Glass is as much a product of Shyamalan’s predilection for misdirection and mystery as of comic book traditions: The film walks well-tread ground, but being spun from whole cloth instead another ...
Because of these factors, it’s an ending that feels rushed and unearned – despite being a ballsy but misguided approach to comic book movies. Ultimately, Glass doesn’t really connect only ...
Glass serves as the final chapter of M. Night Shyamlan's Split/Unbreakable trilogy, with three superbeings, Elijah Price, ...