My favourite part is when he works out that more women went to see Rambo Last Blood than the Charlie's Angel. That was the killing blow right there and then! No coming back from that one!
The bit Gimli says about Dwarf women is almost verbatim what Tolkien once wrote. The bit of Dwarf women having beards is not canon at least in Tolkien's work. Though he nevers says Dwarf women don't have beards. The first Dungeons and Dragons movie made a crude joke about them having sturdy chin hairs. I've never been a fan of Dwarf women being bearded. Dwarfs are generally protrayed as a masculine race, but there is a reasonable limit. Tolkien did push the masculine dwarfs thing a little bit genetically. Dwarf Babies in Middle Earth are 67% likely to be boys, 33% likely to be girls. D&D 2nd edition book copied that in their book Complete Book of Dwarves. They also said most couples have 2-3 children. The writers didn't think that one through. 2.1 maybe the replacement level for humans but with dwarves you would need 3.1 children per couple if a third of the population is single by necessity. Also, dwarves die a lot in war. That said, because they are a fictional race, there isn't a right answer.
They say that good things come in threes... The Mandalorian has been very enjoyable thus far The announcement of The Old World The possibility of a new Golden Serpent contest
It was released last week. I don't know what role he played. I haven't seen it (and judging by the numbers, nor has anybody else)
Obviously we can't be 100% certain, but bombing in the opening weekend is huge. I believe that most movies make somewhere around 60% of their total gross revenue in the first two weeks of release (with the opening weekend being the most substantial). As such, estimates of this kind are usually quite accurate. In fairness, to get a clearer picture we'll have to wait and see how much the revenue drops off from the first to the second weekend. Wait and see... it has failed!
Yeah the opening week usually is pretty important. There are good movies that have made some decent money despite a slow start, but that's not common.