I’m convinced the typo in the Tattle’s quote of Chilton (“He man not even be a man”, at around 6:21) was entirely intentional.
I’m convinced the typo in the Tattle’s quote of Chilton (“He man not even be a man”, at around 6:21) was entirely intentional.
I think it was directed by Neil Marshall, and it really showed. This was probably the best, most gorgeous episode yet, from a filmmaking perspective.
That was so, so very cool. Thanks!
Perhaps, in water, it IS transparent by nature, and thus disappears when it shifts into the UV spectrum. Almost like sunlight glinting off water.
Of course not. That would be absurd.
Can confirm about the immunity.
Literally my first thought.
Oh, I didn’t know that. Thanks!
Here you go. Pretty entertaining watch.
Actually, the author admits freely that he very deliberately took this one liberty. He had the option of changing it to something else, like perhaps an explosion, but chose to go with this because he felt that it would resonate with readers more, you know, cos Mars, it has dust, it has storms.
I believe I saw this in a…
Are you kidding? That sounds damn exciting. Then again, designing is exciting to me.
I'd love to make one like this for Mumbai. One that actually goes beyond the slums and cows on the street and over-packed trains. There's a lot, lot more to it.
They were delicious?
So did Asimov, IIRC, which I think is even funnier.
I think Vision's gonna be a deus ex machina, QUITE literally. Comes in at the last battle, no one expects him, including our heroes, manages to be THE thing that helps them win, but it's a bittersweet end.
Using gravity to explain gravity. Lovely.
If I may ask, why do you loathe him?
It's actually in there, near the end of the movie. There's a montage of voice-overs, lines from before in the film, and this is the last one.
It's incredible how fast it goes from the black of space to a beautiful blue sky.