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Take Syndrome, from the first film ... So in the spirit of depressing overanalysis, the Incredibles are most certainly the bad guys. In fact, if you really want to get into it, the Incredibles ...
Here's what I'm talking about: There's a scene in The Incredibles where the villain — Syndrome also known as Buddy — tells Mr. Incredible that he cannot call off the missile that will destroy ...
It’s expressly used to move toward the future — which is presented as much less desirable than the past It’s expressly used to move toward the future — which is presented as much less ...
In the original Incredibles, we see Jack-Jack turn into a baby made of flames, a baby made of metal, and then into a hobgoblin, all in an attempt to escape Syndrome’s kidnapping. We’re made to ...
To catch Syndrome and save the day, Mr. and Mrs. Incredible must make it through a jungle, infiltrate Syndrome's hidden base, and then finally confront the villain in the middle of the city.
Buddy Pine, a pathetic Incredible groupie who becomes the villainous inventor-brat Syndrome, is a spoof of fan-boy obsessiveness as incisive as Comic Book Guy on The Simpsons, for which Bird is a ...
Both even feature the same twist. In the early aughts The Incredibles revealed that the hero-worshipping tech supergenius Syndrome (Jason Lee) wasn’t actually interested in making supers legal ...
2004's The Incredibles. The computer-animated tale of a family of superheroes, the Parrs get drawn out of a forced retirement to face the evil Syndrome and his killer robot. Here are some facts ...
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