There's so much in this episode that if they, individually, were in a better episode, I'd be OK with.
There's so much in this episode that if they, individually, were in a better episode, I'd be OK with.
Came here to find someone who is saying what I was going to say so I could say, "YES! What Eldritch said!"
Does anyone feel like we missed the first half hour of the show or something? It starts so randomly. The Doctor is back at the school and somehow Courtney stole his psychic paper (?!?) and she's upset he said she wasn't special (when??) and then suddenly they're on the moon!
And the real kicker is that Ms. Anders actually called it "optimistic". I found that movie anything but that.
Could the first female-starring superhero movie come from the Spider-Man universe?
This movie looks downright TERRIFYING.
Eh, but it's TOO absurd. Absurd in the sense that the system is actually functional for any amount of time. The problem is that people don't fit in one-dimensional boxes, and if such a system actually existed, just about everyone would be "divergent". It's too ridiculous for me to accept the basic premise.
Didn't they all die last night? "I know lets send the kids down" instead of say 100 well trained adults. Jesus this was bad.
I'm old enough to remember when Sesame Street was a somewhat gritty place for inner-city 6 year olds. SIX, not three. URBAN, not suburban couch potatoes. Oscar was a dick, Cookie Monster was a glutton, Bert and Ernie were the Odd Couple, not the ghey couple down the street, and Kermit was green. The lessons taught…
Re: the burned zombies, they explained it a little on Talking Dead. They said that fire represents two things the decaying vision of zombies can still register: light and movement. So them wandering into the fire kind of makes sense. Also revealed on Talking Dead: the puzzle they were putting together was one of…
As it was in the past, so too, the future.
That commentator was very confused. The original Godzilla was an allegory for the atomic bomb. Not only is he a cruel destroyer, he is also a Japanese metaphor for a cruel 'Yankee' weapon. But he complains when the Yankees themselves want to portray him as such. Odd.
i liked cloverfield. there was questionable acting but for the most part it was enjoyable.
This is the first time that has ever happened.