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Spy Kids Spin Off???

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that's someone messing around right? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.214.250.194 (talk) 11:20, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

No, not messing around -- as strange as it may sound, Trejo played the same character, identified as Machete Cortez, in all four Spy Kids films to date, three of which were before Grindhouse. Check IMDB, or check this Trejo interview: "Machete Cortez in Machete is what Machete Cortez in Spy Kids does when he’s not taking care of the kids." --Nat Gertler (talk) 13:35, 26 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Is Walton Goggins in the movie?

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On the billing block of the new poster, the name listed between Cuba Gooding, Jr. and William Sadler looks like "Walt Goggins," but I can't see it clearly enough and there's been no prior information of Goggins being in Machete Kills. Bluerules (talk) 22:16, 5 September 2013 (UTC)[reply]

I can't tell what it says and there is no higher quality version available. Darkwarriorblake (talk) 22:16, 5 September 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Viewing a high-resoluted version of the poster, it does say Walt Goggins. Rusted AutoParts 23:23, 5 September 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Charlie Sheen and Zoe Saldana

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According to infobox guidelines, the starring parameter is supposed to contain "the actors as they are listed in the billing block of the poster for the film's original theatrical release." While Charlie Sheen's real name does appear under film's title, he is not in the billing block. The actor list in billing block reads as follows:

  • Danny Trejo
  • Michelle Rodriguez
  • Sofía Vergara
  • Amber Heard
  • Antonio Banderas
  • Cuba Gooding, Jr.
  • Walt Goggins
  • William Sadler
  • with Demián Bichir
  • and Mel Gibson as Voz

Those are all the actors. After Gibson, the next credit is the casting director. I don't know why Sheen was omitted from the billing block, but he was. Maybe another poster will include him, but the one uploaded now stops at Gibson.

As for Zoe Saldana allegedly being the film, her citation is over a year old. Since then, she has not appeared in any photos, she is not in any of the trailers, and none of the reviews have mentioned her. The citation was also placed incorrectly- the article does not say the name of her character, it only mentions her involvement. Nowhere on the internet but here is it stated Zoe Saldana plays a character named Liza in this movie. It's possible she was originally cast in the film and left, or her scenes were cut, but at the moment, there's no proof of her being in the final cut of Machete Kills. Bluerules (talk) 14:20, 7 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Moving plot synopsis here until it is properly edited

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I am moving the bloated, informally written plot synopsis by Cineplex here, where it can be properly edited for length, clarity, and formal tone. Plot synopsis should refrain from using verbal contractions, should not use informal slang or epithets like "redneck" or "pussy punch" or "badass space guns", should not include irrelevant trivia that isn't necessary for a reader's understanding of the plot (and this includes fake trailers and post-credits Easter eggs, depending on the content of the Easter egg), and should summarize the plot in a succinct manner. This incompetently-written gibberish is not appropriate for Wikipedia, or any encyclopedia, any more than the similarly incoherent plot Cineplex wrote for the 2013 Carrie film article.

Plot

The film is preceded by a fake trailer for "Machete Kills Again... In Space!", which features the titular hero on an intergalactic mission, starring Danny Trejo, Michelle Rodriguez, Alexa Vega, Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber as a robot named Bleep (which Machete destroys), and Leonardo DiCaprio as "The Man in the Silver Mask" (with the sub-note that the actor playing the role is subject to change).

The actual film starts off with a team of military men arriving at the Arizona-Mexico border, where they start unloading crates filled with high-tech weaponry. They're cornered by Machete Cortez (Danny Trejo) and Sartana Rivera (Jessica Alba), both of whom are aware that these men are planning on selling weapons to the cartel. Sure enough, the cartel arrive right on cue. They whip out their guns and kill all the military men. Machete and Sartana fight back, with Machete slaughtering them with his machete. The cartel leader prepares to kill Machete, stating that "if a man kills a legend, he becomes a legend himself." That's when three helicopters show up with masked men hopping out and shooting the cartel. Sartana pleads with Machete to help her fight these other men, and she goes around to the back of the military truck to find a large missile in the back. A man in a luchador mask walks up to her and shoots Sartana in the head, killing her. Machete finds her body and falls on his knees in despair, just as he is apprehended by the masked men.

Machete is set to be hanged in the office of the racist redneck Sheriff Doakes (William Sadler) after being accused of murdering Sartana. Doakes tells his deputy Clebourne (Samuel Davis) to kick the stool from beneath Machete's feet, which he does, but Machete doesn't die. Instead, he stares viciously at the two men. The phone rings, and Clebourne answers, then passes it to Doakes, saying it's the President. Doakes answers and then grabs his gun to shoot the noose to free Machete. He takes the phone and growls, "This is Machete."

Machete is escorted to Washington DC and to the White House to meet President Rathcock (Charlie Sheen; credited under his birth name Carlos Estevez), who informs Machete that a Mexican cartel member-turned-revolutionary named Marcos Mendez (Demian Bichir) has a plan to launch a powerful missile at Washington unless Mexico is invaded to put an end to the corruption within that country. Ratchcock orders Machete to find Mendez and kill him. Machete refuses the mission until Rathcock grants him U.S. citizenship and tells him to do this for his country and for the late Sartana.

Arriving in San Antonio, Texas, Machete meets his handler, Blanca Vasquez, aka Miss San Antonio (Amber Heard). She shows off her arsenal of guns and blades, including a three-bladed machete that catches Machete's eye. She briefs him on Mendez's plan and tells him to go to Acapulco to find a young woman named Cereza (Vanessa Hudgens), as she will lead Machete to Mendez. Miss S.A. then has sex with Machete.

Miss S.A. flies Machete to Acapulco, Mexico where he parachutes down to find a brothel run by Madame Desdemona (Sofia Vergara). She orders her band of prostitutes to make sure they get their earned money from any customer who comes in, then sends them away as Machete comes in. He takes out a picture of Cereza and requests to see her. Desdemona leaves to get her, only to come back with a gun. She fires at Machete, prompting him to run and get shot at by the other prostitutes. He runs into a room to find Cereza, who willingly goes with him. He grabs her and jumps out the window.

Machete and Cereza wait at a dock for their ride to see Mendez. She reveals that she is Desdemona's daughter and that Mendez was once a normal man who became insane, earning him the nickname "Mendez the Madman". The two are picked up on a speedboat with a man named Zaror (Marko Zaror) and two revolutionaries. They all board a helicopter to head to Mendez's lair. While they're flying, Zaror says "Mendez sends a message," and he shoots Cereza in the stomach and throws her out of the helicopter to her death.

The helicopter arrives at Mendez's lair. True to his reputation, he is a maniacal man who has a very large missile standing in the middle of the room, and the trigger is wired to his heart, so if he dies, the missile launches. He says there are only two people who know how to disarm it. Zaror kills the only doctor in the room, which leaves only one other person who knows, and he is all the way back in the U.S. To make matters worse, Mendez pulls the trigger on his chest, which leaves 24 hours before the missile launches. Thinking quickly, Machete grabs Mendez and takes on his henchmen, using his triple-bladed Machete to slice into Zaror's stomach and make his way out while killing other goons. He knocks Mendez unconscious and runs to the helicopter. Zaror runs out to fight Machete, but he sticks his hand in Zaror's stomach to pull out his intestine and throw it into the helicopter's blades, pulling Zaror up and slicing him to pieces. Machete boards the helicopter with Mendez, then receives a call from Miss S.A. He tells her that he is taking Mendez across the border, leading her to call President Rathcock. Machete informs them both about the missile's trigger being wired to Mendez's heart, so he is going to find the man who sold him the missile, coming from a company called Voz Tech.

As the helicopter flies over the ocean, two revolutionaries on a speedboat try to shoot at Machete. He jumps out with Mendez and lands in the boat. He knocks out one revolutionary while fighting the other, then grabbing a grappling hook, shooting it at the helicopter, and sticking it to the man, which pulls him up, shreds him, and causes the helicopter to explode. Machete then steers the boat to the docks, but there are more revolutionaries waiting for them. He sticks the gas in the speedboat on full speed and jumps out with Mendez, right before the boat flips over, crashes into the dock, and kills the men with the boat's turbines.

Machete pulls Mendez to land, where Mendez suddenly drops his madman persona and begins to speak to him calmly. He appears to have no recollection of the trigger on his heart and is distraught when Machete tells him that he ordered Cereza to be killed.

At a Mexican radio station, a goon enters and orders the host to read off an announcement over the radio: a hit has been issued on Machete and Mendez, offering over $20 million to whoever kills them. This is heard by Machete's ally Luz (Michelle Rodriguez), as well as Doakes and Clebourne.

Elsewhere in Mexico, a man (Walton Goggins) enters a bar. He asks for a martini but the bartender tells him they only serve tequila and chango. The man orders the chango and then reveals to the bartender that he is the notorious killer known as El Camaleon, for nobody has ever seen his face. He kills the bartender and the other two men in the bar, then leaves. He pulls off his mask to reveal a new disguise (Cuba Gooding, Jr.). He receives a notice about the hit on Machete, and then kills a tourist couple and takes their car.

Machete and Mendez go to a Mexican restaurant where everybody recognizes them and watches them with the intent to kill. A cop named Chepo (Julio Oscar Mechoso) aims his gun at Mendez's head, calling him "loco" ("crazy" in Spanish). This causes Mendez to revert to his madman persona and he begins to punch Chepo's face in, with Machete finally shooting him in the chest. The police arrive to arrest the two, forcing Machete to grab Mendez, kill the restaurant's workers, and cut the gas line to destroy the restaurant.

Meanwhile, Desdemona is in her brothel whipping a man tied to a table while telling him why she hates men - her father used to sexually abuse her as a child until she chewed his balls off. She wraps the whip around the man's neck and breaks it. One of the prostitutes, named KillJoy (Alexa Vega) comes in to tell Desdemona about the hit on Machete. She then hands Desdemona a machine gun bra to prepare herself.

El Camaleon (Gooding) arrives at a garage and learns that Machete was spotted in Villa Guerrera. He asks the man at the garage for directions, but when he fails to answer him properly, he kills the man. He then notices the camera which has captured his face. He shoots it and removes his mask to become a woman (Lady Gaga).

Machete takes Mendez to a clinic after he was shot in the neck at the restaurant. While he's being treated, a prostitute spots them and informs Desdemona and her girls. Machete spots them and puts blood bags in the microwave, causing them explode and spray on the prostitutes. Desdemona opens fire with her machine gun bra, but Machete manages to outrun her. He grabs a defibrillator and uses it on the bra to throw Desdemona several feet away. He once again grabs Mendez and runs.

The duo make it to a shop to get a car. There is a man in a wheelchair there who is willing to turn them in as a group of assassins arrive on the scene. Machete shoots the man's oxygen tank, which pushes the wheelchair into plain sight of the assassins, and they open fire on him and launch a rocket at the man. Machete and Mendez get into an armored vehicle and flee. As they continue to make their way to the border, Mendez tells Machete who he used to be - he was never part of the cartel, but rather, he was Mexico's first secret agent who planned to end the corruption in the country, but his supervisor betrayed him and had his wife and daughter beaten and murdered before his eyes. He went crazy and killed the supervisor and his men, leading him to join forces with the man who sold him the missile.

With about 13 hours before the missile launches, Machete and Mendez arrive close to the border. However, Desdemona and her prostitutes are following, and El Camaleon (Gaga) is not far behind. Machete throws a blade into Desdemona's vehicle that is set to blow up, forcing her and her girls to jump from the vehicle. With it being stranded, it causes El Camaleon to hit the car and overturn his (or her) car. Desdemona runs out with a crotch gun to fire at Machete, but he outdrives her. Defeated, she and her girls walk away.

The wall of the border is too big for Machete to drive through, so Mendez informs him of a wall with graffiti to drive through. It opens to a tunnel and that allows them to burst underground into the U.S. Waiting for them on the other side is Doakes and Clebourne. Doakes aims his gun to kill the two but Mendez throws a blade of his own to cut off Doakes's hand. He then breaks his neck before shooting Clebourne in the head. Not long after, a group of masked men similar to the ones from before arrive. Among them is Zaror himself. He decapitates Mendez while the other masked men pump Machete full of lead.

There's a brief campaign ad to re-elect Rathcock for another term, stating his accomplishments with gun laws and legalizing marijuana in 28 states. He then adds "Winning was only the beginning."

Machete wakes up in a pool at Voz Tech Industries. Next to him is Mendez's headless corpse. Standing over Machete is Luther Voz (Mel Gibson), president of Voz Tech and the same man who gave Mendez the missile. Voz holds a jar containing Mendez's still-beating heart while the missile's launch countdown is still going. He tells Machete he is lying in a healing pool, and then takes him on a tour of the place in his "Star Wars"-inspired vehicle. Voz explains that he has seen the future where the world has come to an end, so he has built a rocket that will take him and anybody willing to join him up into space. Additionally, he has been manufacturing genetically engineered super soldiers, and unleashes a number of Zaror clones to fight Machete. Machete grabs any weapon that's close to him and he kills all the clones. Voz is impressed before discussing the final part of his plan - including Mendez, he has manipulated people in other countries, including North Korea and Russia, into obtaining missiles to launch all around the world. Machete runs out of there with one of Voz's weapons and hops in the "Star Wars" car. He is followed by Voz's men all the way to an electric fence. The weapon he grabbed is a molecule disabler, which he fires at the goons, causing them to disintegrate. A helicopter arrives, and Machete uses a hook to latch onto the blades to swing around and decapitate the remaining henchmen. He gets into the helicopter which is being flown by Luz.

Luz takes Machete back to her hideout with her group, the Network, and tells him that many Mexican laborers have been abducted mysteriously. He tells her about the missile, and she says she knows someone who can disarm it, but he's not gonna like who it is. It's Osiris (Tom Savini), the hitman from the previous film who killed Machete's friend Padre (Cheech Marin). Osiris asks for a chance to redeem himself, remorseful for killing Padre. Machete is then contacted by Miss S.A. who asks him to meet her at a rendezvous point after she's done with her swimsuit competition. Luz knows that Machete had sex with Miss S.A. and says his judgment is clouded.

Machete meets Miss S.A. at the rendezvous point with Luz, Osiris, and another guy named Tito following close by. Miss S.A. betrays Machete by saying she offered to bring him back to Voz in exchange for winning the competition to crown her Miss Texas. A gunfight ensues between Voz's goons and Machete's friends. Tito is killed and Machete hops onto the villains' car until one of them shoots him off the roof.

Machete wakes up in the desert and walks until a truck driver (Antonio Banderas) stops to pick him up. His Spanish is noticeably awkward and inconsistent, so he gives up and reveals that he is El Camaleon. In his female disguise, he was able to hail the truck's previous driver before assuming another disguise. He takes Machete out of the truck and makes him dig his own grave, but Machete digs up a tunnel where several Mexicans are sneaking past the border. Machete hops in while El Camaleon has his back turned, and he follows soon after he realizes Machete's gone. Unfortunately for him, he runs into a group of border-patrolling rednecks who shoot him to death. Meanwhile, Machete makes it out. He is picked up by Luz's allies and taken back to her hideout. She addresses all of them on Voz's plan to launch his missile and rounds everybody up to help her and Machete fight back.

Just barely half an hour is left before the missile launches. Machete, Luz, and the Network infiltrate a party thrown at Voz Tech Industries by disguising themselves as the help. Voz is set to bring all the guests with him into space, complete with their own weird futuristic wardrobe. Machete comes in and tells the crowd that Voz plans to bring the world to an end, prompting the Network and Voz's henchmen to engage in another gunfight. Machete runs after Voz while Miss S.A. shoots out Luz's other eye and kills other Network members.

Machete and Osiris find the heart, which Osiris finds too complicated to disarm. Voz enters and shoots the heart, leaving only five minutes left before the launch. He aims his molecule disabler at Machete, but Osiris jumps in and takes the shot to finally redeem himself. Machete and Voz engage in a duel with their own bladed weapons. Voz gains the upper hand and nearly kills Machete, until Machete uses his hook to pull a flamethrower to spit fire in Voz's face, leaving him horribly disfigured. He stumbles into another room to grab the silver mask seen at the beginning in the fake trailer. At the same time, Luz, now blind, fights Miss S.A. She throws her crown at Luz, but she catches it and throws it back at Miss S.A.'s chest, hitting her heart. Luz finishes her off with a blast to the head.

As Machete runs to turn off the missile, Voz succeeds in rounding up the party guests and the Network to bring them with him and the other abducted laborers into his rocket. He also has Luz frozen in carbonite (just as she flips him off). The missile launches with Machete riding it. He cuts the blue wire inside, and the missile falls into a river just as Voz's rocket launches into space. President Rathcock and his men find Machete, and he thanks him for saving the world. He asks where Voz is, and Machete points to the sky. Rathcock says he has a new mission for Machete to go into space to get Voz, and before he says anymore, Machete immediately accepts the mission.

In the final shot, Machete goes to the Space X station in an astronaut suit and boards the rocket that will take him up to find Voz and defeat him once and for all, setting the stage for "Machete Kills Again...In Space!" It's also shown that Desdemona and her girls will face off with Machete yet again, leading to a cliffhanger where the masked Voz holds a blade at Luz's neck in front of Machete, swinging the blade before cutting to Rathcock saying he approves this message.

After the credits:

There's an outtake with Michelle Rodriguez "pussy-punching" Amber Heard, which Heard laughs about, followed by President Rathcock in space, firing his own badass space guns.

The edit about the post credits scene has been excised recently. The phrasing may produce disagreement, but shouldn't the synopsis include the fact that it exists? It's more or less commonplace and accepted for even minor post credits scenes to be include in Wikipedia film synopses. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.194.65.38 (talk) 05:03, 9 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The post credits scene has now been restored. Should anyone find it necessary, edit it for length or content, but Please, do not delete it. Even when they don't contribute to the plot (and perhaps most don't), post credits scenes are to be included in synopses. If someone's determined to exclude any mention of it, I guess I can't stop them, but I fail to see how such an exclusion helps. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.194.68.202 (talk) 03:28, 12 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Machete Kills Again ...In Space

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Should we add a new article for Rodriguez's next film in the series, Machete Kills Again in Space now? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 184.96.206.227 (talk) 07:48, 27 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, the next sequel should be added as it was hinted at towards the beginning of the film in the "coming attractions" and at the end of the film, most noticeably. 68.45.110.5 (talk) 06:39, 15 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Why Machete Kills Again is still hasn't appeared ? --R6chid0un35 (talk) 20:32, 11 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Comedy??

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Someone started a chain of reverts from action film to comedy, and so on and so forth. I checked, and it looks like an action film, definitely not a comedy (with all that blood). So I propose: reinsert the term action film. Can anyone who cares about this entry set this right? Thanks,Super48paul (talk) 20:36, 7 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

WP: DOITYOURSELF, it's not a comedy, Anchorman is a comedy. This is an action film, it features satire, it features elements that might be funny, but it is not a comedy. Darkwarriorblake (talk) 20:44, 7 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Ridiculous. The film is widely regarded and discussed as an action comedy. Grandpallama (talk) 16:53, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Just to hold back arguements, just saying statements like "widely regarded" or "it's obvious" or whatever is not good sourcing. Find critics who have seen the film who aren't guessing genres from trailers and use that as a source, or better yet, bring them here so we can expand the article. Andrzejbanas (talk) 17:01, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

As has been done. There was no question about this until the disruptive editing began, seeing as how sources do widely discuss the film as an action comedy. It took all of thirty seconds to add a source and locate multiple others. Beyond that, using the presence of blood or action as a litmus test to determine whether or not a film can be construed as a comedy is, as I said, ridiculous. Grandpallama (talk) 17:12, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think having blood makes it an action film or not. There's not much in Batman for example, but I can find sources calling it that too. Andrzejbanas (talk) 17:17, 24 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Parody + Science fiction

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Before adding genres like science fiction please find sources. The plot itself seems James Bond-esque at best, and It's not clear what it's parodying. Rodriguez' films are often over the top, but the main plot arch isn't terribly science fiction themed and when we discussed genre earlier. We found sources predominantly focusing on comedy and action. If it's a parody, what's it a parody of? Andrzejbanas (talk) 15:30, 29 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The film parodies several elements of Star Wars. For example, Voz's personal factory vehicle is shaped like Luke Skywalker's Landspeeder. In another scene, Voz freezes Luz in Carbonite like Han Solo. As for sources on the film being sci-fi, here you go: 1, 2. More to come. - Areaseven (talk) 15:57, 29 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Several films have pop culture references. This isn't a spoof film like Airplane! or those films like Epic Movie or anything. The film school rejects says it has a "sci-fi angle" which is kind of minor. The Ebert one is good, but I don't think it shares the same prominence as the film being either an action film or a comedy. Andrzejbanas (talk) 16:32, 29 May 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 17 February 2016

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add to

189.223.103.11 (talk) 01:14, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Not done: it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a "change X to Y" format. EvergreenFir (talk) Please {{re}} 21:29, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 18 February 2016

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add the Category:Films about Mexican drug cartels at the end of the articles source

189.223.103.11 (talk) 03:04, 18 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Done clpo13(talk) 19:53, 20 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
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Just "Killjoy" and "Julio"

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Can someone please remove the "Carmenita" and "Junito" names that were added to Julio and Killjoy in the Cast section in both Machete and Machete Kills? Who added that? Unless these names showed up in the credits, they shouldn't be there in the first place. Same with El Chameleon 4. That's gonna make people assume it's a spinoff of Spy Kids, again, when it's not. Yes, Lex and Daryl portrayed both characters, but that doesn't mean they're the same character with a different name. Please no assumptions or guessing.

58.84.201.53 (talk) 14:42, 18 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

 Done Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 23:57, 29 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

you should be making movies

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{ Contribution deleted.
It only contained personal opinions (and many nonsense) about the film, but was in no aspect of any use to this article.
Steue (talk) 00:46, 12 May 2023 (UTC) }[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 15 February 2023

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This is a fix for a spelling mistake in the “Possible Sequel” section.

Change:

“… ans labeled as a …”

To:

“… and is labeled as a …” Mii415 (talk) 03:18, 15 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

 Done Cannolis (talk) 04:40, 15 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Elon Musk sentence in a new line

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Re.: Machete Kills #Cast / 3rd list item "Mel Gibson"
On my screen the term "Elon Musk" happened to be at the beginning of the second line. And because "Elon Musk" is a link this created the (first) impression that Elon Musk was part of the cast, which in fact he was not.

Therefore my suggestion is, to let the second sentence start at a new line. This would prevent this wrong first impression from happening on many screens.

Ping welcome, Steue (talk) 00:56, 12 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]

I just saw that Elon Musk in fact was part of the cast.
But still, the link "Elon Must" shouldn't be at the beginning of a line of this list item.
Ping welcome, Steue (talk) 01:10, 12 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Cameos as bulleted list items?

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Shouldn't the actors from "Jessica Alba" to "Elon Musk" have bulleted list items as well?
Ping welcome, Steue (talk) 01:42, 12 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Done. Steue (talk) 02:25, 12 May 2023 (UTC)[reply]