bluebottle
bluebottle
bluebottle

For me it's fucking Google Chrome, and I know I'm not alone. For a while, I thought it was my aging Macbook Air with its 90% full hard drive (and to some extent it is), but I've discovered that whenever things get mind-bendingly, rip-my-hair-out, cuss-at-the-computer, "my coworkers must think I have serious anger

That's all I'm saying. Cole's sacrifice may have saved the future world by allowing them to create a vaccine or cure, though Gilliam wisely doesn't show us that- just the hint with Jones on the plane. I call that a win (for Cole I mean). :)

oh! that makes sense. where as in the tv series they wanted him to change the future.

The movie at least didn't start out trying to stop the plague, they just wanted a pure strain so they could beat it in the future. The change in the SciFi version sets it up for the Dance of the Paradox no matter which way they turn. It is the inherent problem with single timeline thinking. If you ignore quantum

I wouldn't necessarily say that it's a flaw to challenge the theories of predestination. But, thinking about it, it does make the question Dr. Jones asked Cole seem somewhat suspect. ("Do you believe in fate?" Or whatever.)

the fact that Cassandra knew Cole's name in that corrupted recording they found in the future is proof enough that Cole can't change anything. Cassandra couldn't possibly know Cole unless he already time traveled and changed things since they're from two completely different time periods.

And as other posters have pointed out, "Cole is immune to paradoxes"... What does that mean?

That's making the assumption that time is linear, and cause is immediately followed by effect. I'm of the opinion that he's not going to stop the virus, and will through his time travel end up unleashing it. I think small things can change, like how he scratched Railly's watch, but it wouldn't surprise me at *all* if

Zoomies are so cute.

Spaced, The World's End, Paul, and Shaun of the Dead.

1. Peter Dinklage

He did write something of an autobiography in his mid-life called Travels. I've love to see that expanded on. I always thought it was proof if you want to be a good writer, just go out, travel, and live.

Oooh I wanna play with one of these so bad! Just hoping FB doesn't ruin it by shoehorning itself into the UI overmuch.

Wrong. It's much safer to the point where here in NYC some "Walk" signs actually turn green long before the actual traffic light to give pedestrians a chance to cross first, because it make no sense to have human bodies competing for space on the street with multi-ton vehicles. Same for bicyclists. If the light is

Rudd is fantastic, but it lacked the whole heist vibe I was expecting.

I think you hit the nail on the head - cleaning something up so that it looks more at home on modern hi-res screens is good, adding or altering content is bad... or at least misguided.

I hope they pull a Roseanne, and at the end of the season we cut to Leslie, pushing away from her laptop and looking longingly at a picture of Ben on her desk. We find out that Ben died in a car crash prior to the flash forward and all of season 7 was some fiction Leslie was writing.

That's assuming we aren't all characters in a computer simulated universe.

I prefer this movie so much to John Hughes' teen flicks it's not even funny.

Hot Fuzz has a perfect screenplay. Every line is a joke or will be referenced later to make a joke. There is also an unbelievable amount of foreshadowing.