Alch3misto
Alch3misto
Alch3misto

There’s a sequel now as well that is similarly good and pretty.

There’s a sequel now as well that is similarly good and pretty.

Now playing

There’s also Peter Jackson’s Braindead/Dead Alive.

I love Slither. Such a great send up to monster/alien movies. Also Dead Snow. Best zombie movie I’ve seen since 28 Days Later. 

At this rate we’re definitely getting a real assassin’s creed japan from ubisoft... and some time in the far future when 2020 is old history, an assassin’s creed Florida with a karen DLC.

I had used joysticks before, but it wasn’t until I got my Thrustmaster Cougar HOTAS that flight sims really opened up for me. Programming all the functions to be right under my fingers -- view, zoom, flaps, gear, weapon selection, bomb bay doors, bombsight, etc.; no more dancing around the keyboard while I’m trying to

They kick ass for the Lord.

And, for those who don’t really understand science...which means mostly people who didn’t read this.

I for one was excited by a new take on the Fantastic Four. Especially when they already made the perfect Fantastic Four movie and accidentally called it The Incredibles.

If you took Friends and made an all black cast you'd have "Living Single"

I see where you’re coming from, but nah. Part of representation is normalizing the casting of non-white/cis/hetero actors. There certainly aren’t enough stories that speak to disenfranchised groups but there’s also nothing wrong with telling a story that includes these groups without necessarily giving them specific

w00t!

I’m all for that.

Yeah the book was a mess.  I think the author was trying to experiment in techniques or something.   It was not good on any level. 

Pitch Black

I agree that the book doesn’t work at all (although it has interesting bits, and is unexpectedly much more violent than the movie), and the movie is much better - but Burgess wrote the movie too. I think the book was a case of a young super-ambitious writer trying to be super-experimental in a way that he couldn’t

Although the still alive at the time Stanislaw Lem considered it a travesty.

I’m kind of with you on this, though I’ll admit it’s been a very long time since I saw the Stallone version. I was a huge fan of 2000AD as a kid (the comic that featured Judge Dredd), and remember being pleasantly surprised by the Stallone movie when I saw it at the cinema - I understood why we’d see his face, because

I don't mean to be snarky or dismissive, but I'm pointing at the real problem with Infinite. Brilliant as the game is - and as earnestly as it tries to explore social-political issues - Infinite is tethered to its mechanical nature as a shooter in ways that undermine its aspirations. It's possible to love the game for