Critical Drinker had an informal discussion video with one line that really stands out. "If you find
Friends offensive, how do you live your life?"
I always thought the show was pretty bland and inoffensive. Admittedly I watched it for a while because I liked looking at Jennifer Aniston and Courtney Cox which kept me interested when the jokes failed to land, but eventually the show's formulaic plots and stupid shenanigans stopped being funny to me entirely.
They threw the line in to draw attention on the false idea that there is no such thing as bad publicity.
I am a BIG fan of Blue Beetle. After season 2 of Young Justice (which centered around Blue Beetle and the Reach) got me intrigued by his character, used my subscription to DC universe to read most of Blue Beetle's back catalog of comics. There wasn't a whole lot of them, but they were pretty good.
As long as the film not a steaming woke turd, I'll probably watch it in theaters. My impression is it has woke things in it, but it is not a steaming woke turd. Perhaps I am wrong.
All things considered, it's Jaime Reyes father that bad mouthed Batman, not Jaime. That is not a giant stretch from the original source material because his father was never liked Jaime being a super hero and did sort of resent Batman for not "curing" Jaime of his affliction.
The movie version of Jaime has him as a young adult, but all the comics and animated version have him as a high schooler. I can forgive that change, the market for high school super hero movies is a bit oversaturated right now.
Unless the trailer is misleading, the movie seems to hit most of the core of Jaime's character. He is family oriented, has youthful naivety, newbie insecurity, but also revels in his new power.
I'm not sure the female scarab voice is a good choice. Different comics and/or animated version all seem to either make it male voiced or animalistic communicating impulses and emotions but never words. The important thing those is that there is a conflict between Jaime and the scarab that they eventually reconcile.
Blue Beetle typically has two ongoing antagonists. First, you have either a black ops government agency, mad scientist super villain, or evil corporation that wants to seize the scarab. Second, you have the alien race known as the Reach that built the scarab in the first place in order to help take over Earth. In my opinion the Reach are by far more interesting antagonists.
It does not look like the Reach is going to be in this movie. My
educated guess is there will an end credit scene setting up the Reach for a sequel movie that will never come.
The general premise is that beetle scarabs provide superpowers to the wielder but also enslave the wielder to the Reach. Jaime Reyes beetle scarab was malfunctioning so it did not enslave him.
In the longest running Blue Beetle comic series. After defeating the Reach, Blue Beetle freezes hundreds of other Beetle Warriors across the galaxy. He's patting himself on the back for this, but then a month later, the Beetles Warriors inform him that now
they are planning to take over the galaxy in place of the Reach which was a fun arc to explore. In other words, the Beetles were free to kill who
they wanted to kill and not who the Reach told them to kill.