MatthewGuy
Monkey Space Pirate
MatthewGuy

Or: How Quentin Tarantino is the poster child for Post-Modernism run amok.

I haven’t played it yet, and asking this may make me a clueless old person,but:

Gulls are very omnivourous. I think I’d be eating pigeons if I were in their shoes. What’s wrong with eating pigeons?

I enjoyed all of the Riddick films, but calling it a well built science fiction universe is just nutty. Each exists in its own universe, related to each other about as much as three different dreams.

He liked it, was on track to be a career Naval officer, and had to leave for health reasons in time to miss WWII entirely.

I don’t exactly feel strongly about it, or I would have had more to say. The name just popped into my head, and a quick scan of his filmography told me that it was a reasonable suggestion, if not particularly thought through. Been ages since I read that book, too.

David Fincher

I’m not sure about the Wachowskis on this, if only because I don’t think they’re capable of making a movie without a heavy handed love story where the power of adolescent infatuation saves the day. This can be a burden on movies they wrote from scratch, and I hate to imagine what it would do to Dune.

Reality check:

Star Trek

If we can use a time machine, replace Channing Tatum with young William Shatner in Jupiter Ascending.

But if you don’t force the players to slog through each level, how will you get them to keep putting quarters in the machine?

To summarize:

yes, better. i was just going off the top of my head.

It was one of those rare moments that make commentary tracks worthwhile. It was Lucas and some interviewer, and they came up on a continuity error that Lucas never even knew about (but had become a thing among some fans) and after hearing about it, as he watched a scene that he directed, and that totally worked, he

That’s really all I can think of when Nu Trek comes up:

Which one? The Fear Prayer, or whatever they called it, from Dune?

“I will not nitpick continuity

Star Trek: The Desscration of Roddenberry’s Grave

There is something that sometimes happens to great artists in their later years. When I look at the famous later works of Jack Kirby and Pablo Picasso, I see crude caricatures that are somehow perfect. They mastered their craft to the point that they could do that, slopping out a few lines and walking away from a