In a 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:recent interview to promote 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The Super Mario Bros movie, Seth Rogen said that he “doesn’t do voices” when it comes to the characters he plays. If you hire him to be in your movie, chances are he will turn up and deliver something that sounds and feels like Rogen. Nothing more and nothing less. Which is fine, especially given the sort of comedies and material he’s spent decades building a career on. We sit down to watch a Seth Rogen film and know what we’re going to get, but I suppose I was expecting a little more dedication for Donkey Kong.Compared to the likes of Chris Pratt, Charlie Day, Anya Taylor-Joy, Jack Black, and the rest of the cast - who all seem to put spins on their existing voices with a welcome dose of charm and personality - everything we’ve heard from Donkey Kong is simply very Rogen. He’s said that prior to being cast as the character that we didn’t know much about him. Aside from the DK Rap and animated series, he’s never had much of a mainstream voice, and kids going to see this new film will likely embrace his take on things. But anyone over the age of 15 is going to hear the cop from Superbad and wonder why it’s coming out of a giant monkey.Related: Across The Spider-Verse Is Ask🍨ing Us What It Really Me🍷ans To Be A HeroThe internet spent months shitting on Chris Pratt’s casting as Mario and how he was going to phone everything in and bastardise the icon. He doesn’t, and seems to deliver a winning rendition of the beloved plumber with an expectant Brooklyn twang. He has heart, humour, and the help of Anya Taylor-Joy and Charlie Day’s equally expressive turns to support him. Everyone puts in a pretty solid effort, and so does Rogen, but you’d hope there would be a little something to draw from that allows Donkey Kong to be more than just a giggly stoner.donkey kong swinging in the super mario movieRogen’s philosophy seems to be that anyone who approaches him to be in a blockbuster film should know that he doesn’t venture to new pastures very often, content with giving us the same performances over and over and over instead of trying something new. He’s got steady work though, and I wonder if there’s ingrained fear that venturing too far outside the box would harm his reputation. It’s rare to see an actor actively fight against chances to make a character into something more though, deciding instead to show up, use your voice, and get paid. It strikes me as soulless on the surface, when I know Rogen likely doesn’t hold any ill will towards the role. Yet there are so many layers to this duplicity that I cannot help it!At the film’s premiere, all the main cast members seemed to put some serious effort into their drip. Anya Taylor-Joy was sporting a gorgeous pink bodysuit reminiscent of the outfit Princess Peach wears in the film, while Chris Pratt and Charlie Day have classy suits which match the colour schemes of their respective characters. Jack Black even came wearing a custom suit and cool little Bowser-esque shell accessory. And Seth Rogen is there in the blandest suit and some white trainers. Not even a quirky little Donkey Kong t🧜ie or nothing.

Poor effort, my dude. Imagine the sick looks you could have pulled off as the very first cinematic take on Donkey Kong. You could have wo🏅rn a gorilla suit and everyon🧸e would dig it, or even themed attire with select colours and accents that lean into the fun of it all. The interviews I mentioned earlier give me the impression that Universal and Illumination went to Seth Rogen because of the name recognition he could bring to the project over his potential delivery, because letting him just use his normal voice makes it very clear that there wasn’t much resistance at all. His Donkey Kong could have been great, but it just doesn’t have the heart.

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