What's even more impressive is that Dwight was watching and saw the guys come to take Marv...but Dwight didn't even bother to do anything because he knew Marv could handle it.
There's a part in the book 'a Dame to kill for', Dwight hasn't seen Marv for a while and he says 'Marv doesn't mean any harm but he causes plenty'.. Haha
If you liked him in the movie, please read the Sin City comic “The Hard Goodbye”. He’s even better there, much darker and more complex, yet somehow relatable. Marv isn’t a psychotic murderer, he’s a tortured soul who can’t figure out how to escape.
I can't necessarily explain why, but my favorite part about this scene is Dwight's observation of Marv. Like there's a thousand different stories in Basin City and they're all woven together, even if the tapestry is frayed and ragged. This would make a decent anthology type series on Netflix or something.
You reminded me of the quote by journalist James Breslin, the one who received the letters from the "Son of Sam" killer: "There are eight million stories in the naked city, and this is one of them."
You may get your wish, homie. There's talks of turning Sin City into a TV series. As much as I love this movie, I hope they reboot all the comics as a series to get new fans in on it. Hopefully it goes to HBO so it won't be toned down. And I agree; Dwight's observation is my favorite part, too. I'd love to learn more about the dynamic between him, Marv, and Bruce Willis.
I wanna know more about the guy at the start that shoots the woman I the red dress....I think I read she hired someone to kill her to escape her vicious husband but didn't know who was going to kill her.
Why is Sin City full of so many memorable quotes "Damn, he's slick" "I love hitmen. No matter what you do to em, you never feel bad" "I take away his weapon, both of em" "You made a big mistake too, you didn't flush" Just to name a few, such a good movie, and even better comics
"The fire, baby. It'll burn us both." and the way it was delivered is one of the coolest things I've ever heard. Also Marv going "There's no settling down! This is blood for blood, and by the gallons. This is the old days, the bad days, the all or nothing days. They're back. There's no choices left, and I'm ready for war." Was extraordinary. That's some amazing writing. And again, it was delivered with such confidence that you can't help but sit there in awe and nod in agreement. Brilliant.
A lot of people overlook it, because Sin City is a highly stylized comic-book movie, and because he's hidden behind prosthetics and make-up, but Mickey Rourke gave a pretty damn amazing performance in this movie. He knew this can be a good thing for his career, probably the only shot at a bigger movie he was going to get and Marv was the perfect part both for him and in itself. And he killed it. Right now, you can't even imagine Marv without thinking about Mickey Rourke's voice, mannerisms, body language, etc. The comic-book version feels somewhat different, Rourke gave the brute heart, soul and some IDK, hidden gentleness. And he does so many little things great - for example at 2:00 when he has the voice-over about hitmen. His facial expressions perfectly match the emotion in the voice over. It seems like a little thing, but I think in this movie, Rourke is the only actor whose facial expressions integrate and use the voice-over to support the moment-to-moment emotion the character is expressing on the screen. Willis and Owen do a solid job too with this, but Rourke just nails it, his facial expressions and the voice over are aligned perfectly. I think people underestimate how precise the performance is. It's a shame he didn't put forth the same effort in the sequel as he could've saved it, but here, we all got acting greatness. Rourke always was a top of the line actor, an exceptional talent. He just destroyed his life and career so much, even when people compliment his work like most did in Sin City, they overlook just how great he really is. Hell of a performance for sure, he's easily the best thing in the entire movie.
This movie is so good. Such great lighting. It's really like a comic strips. Also love the colors highlighting things like blood or Goldie's golden hair. Also Marv with his imposing statue and fearsome voice, good acting.
@@jhonnysilverhand13 also true, but he does take a perverse joy in doing very bad things to people, and it is implied that he has a history of doing extremely bad things to people. So that pushes him towards more neutral grounds in the grand scheme of things.
Marv was inspired by conan the cimmerian. He feels like he's straight out of a Robert E. Howard novel. Frank Miller is awesome and Mickey Rourke is excellent in this film
I was hoping that too, but realistically it'd be hell. For starters, while Marv will take Nancy's word on everything, he reads the paper as much as everyone else in Basin City. Meaning he'll think Hartigan is a child molester and would probably try to tear him limb from limb. Dwight, who owes Marv one for what he did for him in A Dame To Kill for would probably back him up. But if Nancy vouched for Hartigan to them, they'd probably be the best of friends.
I must admit, having only seen the movie once, I'm struggling to see a direct connection between the 3 storylines. I see the indirect connection though with all the baddest guys in the baddest joint in the baddest swamp called Basin City.
Actually the movies make it easy. Hartigan's story takes place before the events of The Hard Goodbye (Marv) and The Big Fat Kill (Dwight) You can tell, because in the conclusion of his story, when he goes after Junior, Kevin is seen in the farmhouse sitting alone and reading. And the fact that he didn't go after Hartigan also says more about his character. He may kill and eat Prostitutes but if a cop is after the son of the Uncle that cared for him like a son, that's not his problem. Anywho the only reason why they never interacted was because Hartigan died, before Marv did.
Exactly. I thought this film was going to be like Pulp Fiction. Where many different stories happen and everything all comes together at the end. But no, nothing alike. No connection at all. Sin City 2 had much more connection between the characters.
I like how he walks exaggeratedly"ultra-relaxed" at the part with mercs, as if according to his concepts at the moment the level of danger for him has become NEGATIVE.
This entire trilogy was cinematic genius. Micky Rourke, Clive Owen and Bruce Willis were all perfectly cast. As Frank Miller said in an interview, the part of Marv was written for Micky Rourke. "Shot and a brew Shelly and keep 'em comin." ❤❤❤ "They'd have tossed him girls like Nancy. " ❤❤❤ "An old man dies and a young girl lives... fair trade."❤❤❤ "I love hit men. No matter what you do to them, you don't feel bad. " ❤❤❤
I just learned the other day that none of these four filmed this scene together. They filmed Rourke, Owen, Alba, and Murphy's parts separately and stitched them together in post.
Best feature of this flick is it's being done in black & white, It creates the "perfect" film noir/classic comics atmosphere. Added to that, the absolutely surreal midnight-city skyline scenes from high up. Then the underworld scenes. Then just the right actors -- including one of the sexiest actresses ever - Brittany Murphy -- RIP.
The guy talking about Marv's coat and then having his eyes almost crushed because he didn't know who he was talking to is hilarious 🤣🤣 this movie is my favorite and I wish there were more movies like a sequel or a TV Series. Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
This character MARV was one of Mickey's finest moments on film! The Roids jacked him up to the max! Imagined facing off with him in the UFC on your debut fight!!!
When I watched Marv for the first time I became a fan and a fan of Mickey Rourke and started going for boxing ... Even to this day I follow Mickey Rourke all because of Marv
Draven Marv has a lived a long violent life. I'm sure there's plenty of people he hurt that didn't deserve it. The guy that he dug his thumbs into is probably one of them. Regardless of his extremely violent tendencies, he has a good heart. When he has no choice but to hurt someone, I'm sure he feels bad in a lot of instances.
Nice scene, although personally I thought it'd be cool if Marv depth-charged (dropped the shot of whiskey into his glass of beer before chugging it) that last boilermaker before going out with the hitmen.
Marv should have been born in the Hyborian Age. I'd love to see a Conan and Marv crossover. The two baddest badasses of their worlds. That would be high adventure!
Conan walks into yet another portal and ends up in Sin City Marv then helps him find the spellcasting son-of-a-bitch that is hiding out somewhere in the city and they both give him a hard goodbye, then Marv ends up being sucked through the portal that opens up when the BBEG's blood hits the spell thingies in the hideout, and then they have one hell of an adventure with Marv trying to find his way back, he promised to eat dinner with his mom next week.
Not enough people talk about how perfect the cgi was used to replicate the effect of black and white comics.
It’s incredible.
Jay Peterson I was about to say this doesn’t. Seem like a regular black n white filter
@@PANCHOSWAY Nah, to get that hard white, CGi has to be applied. E.g. stuff like blood and the band-aids on Marv's face.
It's . . . fine. Get worse and more noticeable with each watch.
The whole movie was shot with a green screen so it’s pretty freaken impressive for 2005
That's how comic should be adopted to movie. It's like 1:1 without adding bullsht
Dwight’s description of Marv could not be more on point
What's even more impressive is that Dwight was watching and saw the guys come to take Marv...but Dwight didn't even bother to do anything because he knew Marv could handle it.
@@blaqwhole4998 Yeah. Sometimes, the soldier meets the career...
Damn straight 😎🥃
There's a part in the book 'a Dame to kill for', Dwight hasn't seen Marv for a while and he says 'Marv doesn't mean any harm but he causes plenty'.. Haha
A dynamic tag team Dwight and Marv 😎🥃
Marv was the best character in this movie..
True
If you liked him in the movie, please read the Sin City comic “The Hard Goodbye”. He’s even better there, much darker and more complex, yet somehow relatable. Marv isn’t a psychotic murderer, he’s a tortured soul who can’t figure out how to escape.
They should make him into a new superhero and give him his own series
Naaahhh... Bruce Willis as "Max Payne" it was.
Nah. Elijah wood
Marv's obsession with nice coats always makes me smile
Spoilers for A dame to kill for, I love the part where he finished that one guy and stole his hat
Normal guy: Terrified and praying to god if two hitmen target him in a bar
Marv: Just happy he's getting a new coat
🤣🤣👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Well he was there to bait them for a lead, but who's gonna waste a fine coat like that?
2 years late, but this comment is gold! Thank you for the laugh tonight!! lmao
Marv is like a really high level player character. Oh random hostile NPCs are attacking? Cool free loot.
@@scooterthefrog exactly, why waste a fine coat like that?
R.I.P. Brittany Murphy. You were an amazing acress and would have been a great Harley Quinn.
IN DEED
MadamPluto Agreed
So that's who she is, dam😥
The details of her death on Wikipedia are very suspicious.
Murphy as harly quinn and Del Toro as the joker (based on his jackie boy performance) was truly a missed opportunity.
I always loved the line "he just had the bad luck of being born in the wrong century"
Mickey is a damn legend he was perfect for this role. Playing a antihero couldn't be better fitting role for him. He also plays the ultimate badguy.
I hope someone would make a movie just about marv and his backstory it would be cool as shit.
He appears all the time in the comics.
Keef Croc Why THE FUCK would you get rid of such an awesome movie? :)
A Dame To Kill for shows more of Marv's life.
I agree with you ..
@@Shanethefilmmaker That movie sucks. Even the poor Marv sucks there, they not even made his face right.
I can't necessarily explain why, but my favorite part about this scene is Dwight's observation of Marv. Like there's a thousand different stories in Basin City and they're all woven together, even if the tapestry is frayed and ragged. This would make a decent anthology type series on Netflix or something.
that he was born in the wrong century? yeah i liked that too
You reminded me of the quote by journalist James Breslin, the one who received the letters from the "Son of Sam" killer: "There are eight million stories in the naked city, and this is one of them."
You may get your wish, homie. There's talks of turning Sin City into a TV series. As much as I love this movie, I hope they reboot all the comics as a series to get new fans in on it. Hopefully it goes to HBO so it won't be toned down. And I agree; Dwight's observation is my favorite part, too. I'd love to learn more about the dynamic between him, Marv, and Bruce Willis.
I wanna know more about the guy at the start that shoots the woman I the red dress....I think I read she hired someone to kill her to escape her vicious husband but didn't know who was going to kill her.
@@captaincrum1 Man you'll need to either read his wiki or read the comics. All of them. He's called the Colonel
Brittany Murphy was so hot
Insanely yes
He has to be the most badass character in history. I fucking love this movie.
and he also respects wamen
@Douangphatay Bouphasavanh ok
Miller specifically wrote Marv as, "Conan in a trench coat."
I love this movie too! This movie kicks ass!!!
Why is Sin City full of so many memorable quotes
"Damn, he's slick"
"I love hitmen. No matter what you do to em, you never feel bad"
"I take away his weapon, both of em"
"You made a big mistake too, you didn't flush"
Just to name a few, such a good movie, and even better comics
Well it's a straight comic adaptation. Very honest, without alteration. It's perfect that way
You can scream now
Family Values is a personal favorite of mine. Sad yet terrifyingly badass.
Perfectly Sin City.
"Hell of a way to end a partnership"
"That's a fine looking coat you're wearing"
"The fire, baby. It'll burn us both." and the way it was delivered is one of the coolest things I've ever heard.
Also Marv going "There's no settling down! This is blood for blood, and by the gallons. This is the old days, the bad days, the all or nothing days. They're back. There's no choices left, and I'm ready for war." Was extraordinary. That's some amazing writing. And again, it was delivered with such confidence that you can't help but sit there in awe and nod in agreement. Brilliant.
A lot of people overlook it, because Sin City is a highly stylized comic-book movie, and because he's hidden behind prosthetics and make-up, but Mickey Rourke gave a pretty damn amazing performance in this movie.
He knew this can be a good thing for his career, probably the only shot at a bigger movie he was going to get and Marv was the perfect part both for him and in itself.
And he killed it. Right now, you can't even imagine Marv without thinking about Mickey Rourke's voice, mannerisms, body language, etc. The comic-book version feels somewhat different, Rourke gave the brute heart, soul and some IDK, hidden gentleness. And he does so many little things great - for example at 2:00 when he has the voice-over about hitmen. His facial expressions perfectly match the emotion in the voice over. It seems like a little thing, but I think in this movie, Rourke is the only actor whose facial expressions integrate and use the voice-over to support the moment-to-moment emotion the character is expressing on the screen. Willis and Owen do a solid job too with this, but Rourke just nails it, his facial expressions and the voice over are aligned perfectly. I think people underestimate how precise the performance is.
It's a shame he didn't put forth the same effort in the sequel as he could've saved it, but here, we all got acting greatness. Rourke always was a top of the line actor, an exceptional talent. He just destroyed his life and career so much, even when people compliment his work like most did in Sin City, they overlook just how great he really is. Hell of a performance for sure, he's easily the best thing in the entire movie.
Yeah, I read how they couldn't do the makeup like they wanted the first time, and it shows.
What an accurate and insight description Damn!!!
Are you still around?
@@gamoratitan Yup.
@@PiCheZvara would you be interested in co writing a fanfic?
This movie is so good. Such great lighting. It's really like a comic strips.
Also love the colors highlighting things like blood or Goldie's golden hair.
Also Marv with his imposing statue and fearsome voice, good acting.
Gotta love Marv. He's fucked up but he still manages to be a good guy.
They very definition of an Anti-hero.
@@larsuppling981 naa he’s more like chaotic good
Remember in that city everybody is corrupted
@@jhonnysilverhand13 Chaotic Neutral i would say.
He does what he does to people and he does it if he deems it necessary or if they deserve it.
@@larsuppling981 he still has a moral code of not messing with woman’s or children so is more lean to the good
@@jhonnysilverhand13 also true, but he does take a perverse joy in doing very bad things to people, and it is implied that he has a history of doing extremely bad things to people. So that pushes him towards more neutral grounds in the grand scheme of things.
That's a fine looking coat though.
AgentCell Damn straight it is! I'd kill for a coat like that!
I think he took a hacksaw to it later in the film.
TraustiGeir Naw that was another coat.
your killing days are over
A fine coat like that and you’re bleedin’ all over it!
That is such great line
"Going to give them the hard goodbye"
Anytime he says "That's a fine looking coat you're wearing," someone dies. Or is it just me?
Rudy Juarez Someone dies. Marv does have a knack for fancy big brand coats
You're not wrong there's alot of coatless dead men in basin city
@@alexanderarkum4793 Not me. I just gave him my coat and fucked off, he can't run worth a shit.
On an unrelated note I live in Australia now.
Late reply, but he never did kill Manute. Took one of his eyes, but didn’t kill him. I believe that was “A Dame to Kill For”
@@jdamommio jokes on you i live in Queensland.
Marv was inspired by conan the cimmerian. He feels like he's straight out of a Robert E. Howard novel. Frank Miller is awesome and Mickey Rourke is excellent in this film
I love hitmen no matter what you do to them you don't feel bad
Same reason I like democrats
@@daleksupreme2913 Same reason I like Corporate Democrats and Corporate Republicans or in other words, the establishment.
You over the hill do gooder son of a bitch.
The Mutual Friend lmao 😂 I love that part 😊
The Mutual Friend most people think marv is crazy he just had the wrong luck of being born in the wrong century 🙂😊
The calm response when looking down & back at the Gun pointed at him while sitting down. Priceless...
I was hoping there was going to be more interactions between Marv, Dwight and Hartigan. This is the only part in the film that gets close to it.
I was hoping that too, but realistically it'd be hell. For starters, while Marv will take Nancy's word on everything, he reads the paper as much as everyone else in Basin City. Meaning he'll think Hartigan is a child molester and would probably try to tear him limb from limb. Dwight, who owes Marv one for what he did for him in A Dame To Kill for would probably back him up. But if Nancy vouched for Hartigan to them, they'd probably be the best of friends.
I must admit, having only seen the movie once, I'm struggling to see a direct connection between the 3 storylines. I see the indirect connection though with all the baddest guys in the baddest joint in the baddest swamp called Basin City.
Actually the movies make it easy. Hartigan's story takes place before the events of The Hard Goodbye (Marv) and The Big Fat Kill (Dwight) You can tell, because in the conclusion of his story, when he goes after Junior, Kevin is seen in the farmhouse sitting alone and reading. And the fact that he didn't go after Hartigan also says more about his character. He may kill and eat Prostitutes but if a cop is after the son of the Uncle that cared for him like a son, that's not his problem. Anywho the only reason why they never interacted was because Hartigan died, before Marv did.
Exactly. I thought this film was going to be like Pulp Fiction. Where many different stories happen and everything all comes together at the end. But no, nothing alike. No connection at all. Sin City 2 had much more connection between the characters.
Him and Hardigan are the only ones willing to deliver Justice absolute without corruption or fear him and Marv should of teamed up.
Damn shame Brittany Murphy is not longer with us she was so beautiful RIP..beautiful.
Marv’s voice is so deep and scary I love it.
"Now, that's one fine-lookin' coat you're wearin' there."
One of the best characters in film history
Bad Guy - “Prepare to die”
Marv - *Thats a nice coat you got there*
Mickey Rourke was so freakin' good as Marv,perfect casting imo.
The fact we never got a Batman movie in this style is a crime
"I don't hear you givin' me any names. So, I guess when I shot you in the belly, I aimed a little too high."
What is that symbol? I see in on tattoos recently. The word celtic comes to mind
@@hidan407 You are right, it's a triskelion or triskeles, it's an ancient european symbol
at least 3000 years old.
@@russianfunkerroma no it means that you never had the makings of a varsity athlete.
0:30 He's new here, Marv. He didn't know.
That "over-the-hill do-gooder son-of-a-bitch" hitman wins the prize for the most hyphenated sentence in a movie :-D
I love how Marv turns around and looks at the guys coat and then smiles. It’s the subtleties that make Mickey Rourke one of the best
RIP Brit love you more than anyone...
Mickey Rourke as Marv, a perfect pick.
If i own a bar i will let marv in anytime and he can have a free drink
Mickey Rourke, crushed this role. One of my favorite performances in any movie, ever.
I remember the reviews for this. "Elijah Wood terrifies me while Mickey Rourke dazzles me with his acting. What world am I in?"
God damn this movie was incredible.
Nicolas cage almost lost his eyes...
Lt.Master Daniel Biohazard that wasn’t Nicholas Cage. It was Clive Owen
M LG - I think Lt Master was referring to the bouncer looking like Nicholas Cage.
DrRockso1987 oh. That guy. He looks nothing like Cage
p0kerVik1N67 and you must have taken a while to come up with that all on your own. Congrats...
@@p0KerViK1NG67 you must really ruin fun, not just at parties but, in general.
"Coat looks like Bagdag, and so's your face, TAKE IT OFF!" Most random funniest line in the movie.
He told Marv to take off
Baghdad* not Bagdag
like he's telling him to take his face off?
@@samueld5418 not TAKE IT OFF but TAKE OFF
@@uchihamadara2179 What is that?
A real man knows how to appreciate a good coat.
@ 1:11
Fuckin' hell, leave some peanuts for the next guy, Dwight.
Oh I miss Brittany RIP
God Britney if only I'd met her once.
Lucas Rackley
her and her mother
black mold kills
It was drugs
those southern daisies.
most likely opioid abuse.
Hahaha. Marv's probably the reason I name my guns.
They don’t make iconic movies like Sin City anymore. This movie will always be one of my all time favourites 🖤🩸
Clive Owen killed it in this, awesome, the guy they recast as his character was nowhere near good enough.
This movie is a masterpiece.
I remember reading sin city as a kid Miller was great here
He's literally just a older more mature duke nukem
Good call. Nailed it.
Guile from street fighter
Rourkes voice and demeanor was just perfect for this misunderstood monster of a man
Mickey Rourke. What a talent!
I had.a lot of respect for clive owen after he did this movie
The way Jessica Alba moves in this scene is unREAL!
“I guess I aimed a little too high...”😂
"I'm gonna give him the hard goodbye."
This is the only film where not only does the voice over actually work but is necessary.
Marv should be on everyone's list of characters you can't hate.
I like how he walks exaggeratedly"ultra-relaxed" at the part with mercs, as if according to his concepts at the moment the level of danger for him has become NEGATIVE.
This entire trilogy was cinematic genius. Micky Rourke, Clive Owen and Bruce Willis were all perfectly cast. As Frank Miller said in an interview, the part of Marv was written for Micky Rourke.
"Shot and a brew Shelly and keep 'em comin." ❤❤❤
"They'd have tossed him girls like Nancy. " ❤❤❤
"An old man dies and a young girl lives... fair trade."❤❤❤
"I love hit men. No matter what you do to them, you don't feel bad. " ❤❤❤
Put Marv on an ancient battlefield with an ax and Gregor Clegane has met his match.
One of the best comic book performances ever
"... I aimed a little high"...
0 degrees Kelvin cold!
I just learned the other day that none of these four filmed this scene together. They filmed Rourke, Owen, Alba, and Murphy's parts separately and stitched them together in post.
Best feature of this flick is it's being done in black & white, It creates the "perfect" film noir/classic comics atmosphere. Added to that, the absolutely surreal midnight-city skyline scenes from high up. Then the underworld scenes. Then just the right actors -- including one of the sexiest actresses ever - Brittany Murphy -- RIP.
Nothing gets me pumped up like Marv going on a rampage.
RIP Britatny Murphy
rumor has it Marv had been getting free new coats since he hit puberty
Classic movie and shot in black and white comic book style 👍
The guy talking about Marv's coat and then having his eyes almost crushed because he didn't know who he was talking to is hilarious 🤣🤣 this movie is my favorite and I wish there were more movies like a sequel or a TV Series. Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
This character MARV was one of Mickey's finest moments on film! The Roids jacked him up to the max! Imagined facing off with him in the UFC on your debut fight!!!
When I watched Marv for the first time I became a fan and a fan of Mickey Rourke and started going for boxing ... Even to this day I follow Mickey Rourke all because of Marv
@Hobo Jones I follow him on Facebook and Instagram
fanboy much?
Since when has Marv ever felt bad about maiming someone?
Draven
Marv has a lived a long violent life. I'm sure there's plenty of people he hurt that didn't deserve it. The guy that he dug his thumbs into is probably one of them.
Regardless of his extremely violent tendencies, he has a good heart. When he has no choice but to hurt someone, I'm sure he feels bad in a lot of instances.
He slapped wendy and said “sorry”
The dialogue man...fuck I love this film.
0:27
What happens when a tough guy, runs into a real bad ass.
R.I.P to Brittney Murphy
"I don't hear you giving me any names so I guess when I shot you in the belly I aimed a little too high...*BAM*..."
XD XOXO
That cut off scream is fucking hilarious lmao
Marv - that's one fine-looking coat you're wearing there
One of the finest films I've ever seen.
This is the role and character that Mickey Rourke will always be remembered most.
"When I shot you in the belly I aimed too high." Oh man Marv went for the crotch.
I forgot how much I liked this movie. I'm definitely watching it again.
Nice scene, although personally I thought it'd be cool if Marv depth-charged (dropped the shot of whiskey into his glass of beer before chugging it) that last boilermaker before going out with the hitmen.
TheKersey475 why?
It was here that the “Whiskey Chaser” became everyone’s favourite drink.
Man I wish they made this as video game like Max Payne 3.
In my opinion the best roles of Mickey Rourke
Brit Murphy was so fucking gorgeous
RIP
Rumor has it Mickey Rourke didn't have to wear makeup here.
I don't even think he knew they were filming.
@@NickThorbjørnsen2207 Lol right?
@@halleck3 just let Mickey Rourke walk into a bar and start filming
Marv should have been born in the Hyborian Age. I'd love to see a Conan and Marv crossover. The two baddest badasses of their worlds. That would be high adventure!
Conan walks into yet another portal and ends up in Sin City
Marv then helps him find the spellcasting son-of-a-bitch that is hiding out somewhere in the city and they both give him a hard goodbye, then Marv ends up being sucked through the portal that opens up when the BBEG's blood hits the spell thingies in the hideout, and then they have one hell of an adventure with Marv trying to find his way back, he promised to eat dinner with his mom next week.
Sin City is returning, taking place in 1858
Imagine how much of a nightmare the place was back then! This was only 3 years before the Civil War!
"I love animal abusers. No matter what you do to them you don't feel bad."
Director and actors are paying tribute to Miller's genius. Real nice, both the books (a must read) and the movie.
*gets gun pointed at him point blank*
marv: "thats a fine lookin coat you got there"
whole movie is an art piece
thats a man shopping his coats
Gran caracterización y personaje de Mickey Rourke. Era perfecto para dar vida a Marv🎬
This movie is in my top ten of all time. It's just special.
This movie may have the best casting from top to bottom.
Ok serious question now. Whos hotter in this scene. Brittany murphy or jessica alba