Legend has it you’re still in the theater watching it to this day
Legend has it you’re still in the theater watching it to this day
Fair point. Ultimately I am honing in on “bias” vs. “technical realities.” If I have a hard time seeing a dark-skinned person at night in low light, I’m not “biased,” I’m simply experiencing a very explainable human limitation. I figured it was possible the same challenge could exist in this tech space.
Is it not plausible that there could be technical challenges in identifying those two categories of people? A dark-skinned person in low light would seem to present a pretty obvious challenge vs. a subject that is presenting more contrast against the background. I realize training data introduces all sorts of bias,…
All That never even aired in the UK (or certainly didn’t in the 90s) but somehow Good Burger was still deemed worthy of a major theatrical release here, as were films based on SNL skits we’d never seen, such as A Night at the Roxbury and Superstar. One of the blessings of our “special relationship” I guess.
As someone pointed out on Twitter last month, the AMPTP underestimated the strikers because they assume that writers and actors will return to the table once they realize their “cushy lifestyles” are in jeopardy.
If the employers don’t feel a strike it would be kinda pointless.
Also, this article might be the most convincing evidence that the writers don’t write the headlines to their own posts because this:
How in the actual name of hell did they manage to get the entire damn band back together for this on the down low? Did Wright just call em up and they all unanimously went, “Fuck yes?”
How in the actual name of hell did they manage to get the entire damn band back together for this on the down low? Did Wright just call em up and they all unanimously went, “Fuck yes?”
Extreme agreement on the idea that this needs to be the books now instead of just the movie done anime style.
So I couldn’t really get it from any of the write up, but based on the screenshots this looks like a re-telling of the story. Though it’s tough to tell it, it looks closer to the movie than the book in terms of where the plot goes.
Honestly the whole thing where they’re not including the different versions in the home release is kinda horseshit. You can have randomly-selected chapter swaps on a bluray to swap out chunks of a movie with random alternate versions, so you better believe that shit’s possible on streaming. 🤨
Horror really feels like its a director’s genre. The movies rarely depend on star power, and the basic plots are often either unoriginal or, well, kinda dumb. You wouldn’t necessarily pick these premises as great jumping off points for movies:
a US remake of Squid Game is now in active development at Netflix
Major Spoiler:
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If A24 is taking sequel suggestions, I'd like to see "Lamb 2: On The Lam"
Semi spoiler:
I was surprised and impressed by this film. I went into it not knowing too much about it, and really liked how they gave what could have been a rote premise a fresh spin. Great practical effects, good enough writing that they were still able to inject moments of levity in places that felt natural without losing any of…
My big question is what about all the alternate cuts of the film? does the bluray have all the alternate scenes or even better does is switch them out at random every time you watch?
“Don’t worry about it, you can Wiki alla this shit.”
Men is also not from an “up and coming” director. It was the third film he directed after writing others for Danny Boyle. Ex Machina might not qualify as a horror film, but Annihilation should from the bear scene alone.