"Will we ever really discover Atlantis?"
"Will we ever really discover Atlantis?"
I genuinely don't understand the "we know what happens" complaint. That's like saying "we know what happens to Earth—it gets incinerated when the Sun dies." You only know what happens in ONE storyline... there are a whole lot of other storylines that exist independently of "Anakin becomes Darth Vader." That's the…
Crap, beat me to it. I kinda' hate the fact that the comments default to "featured" and I have to think to click over to "all" to actually see everything people have said so far.
"Miranda."
Not quite—at least, that's not my understanding though I may be wrong. I think you're thinking of the corona—which is analogous to an atmosphere. The stellar corona is *massively* hotter than the surface, and intense magnetism plays a role in why, although I don't think the physics of it are entirely understood yet.…
re: Warm Bodies— "zombie hero "R." as he forms an unlikely friendship..." Well, they just lost me right there. I mean, the defining characeristic of zombies (aside from the general dead-ness) is that they are the mindless, soulless, remorseless embodiment of hunger. They have no emotions, they have no reason, no…
So, he's the villain from F.E.A.R.
"what biological purpose do multiple eyes serve?"
Sad to say, no reboots until Lucas (or his estate) decides to give up the rights. And really, when is that going to happen?
@Diogenes-the-Cynic: Why would anyone yell "look out!" when they see a truck hurtling toward an oblivious pedestrian at the crosswalk?
@Dr Emilio Lizardo: I think the answer is BECAUSE it's ridiculous. And therefore it must be done.
@cadrina: Oh, yes it can. I can't stand the whole concept of twilight, but I have no doubts that the flicks' craftsmanship in every regard is better than Vampires Suck, given the pedigree of the previous 40,000 "_movie #" projects that preceded it.
@Dexomega: About Airbender? No, not really. But honestly most of these nominees strike me as less "worst X" than "most hated X" which isn't the same thing. One is about the quality of the thing itself, while the other is frequently about people's prejudices and personal convictions and tastes.
@lovely_grundin: Or it's a hallucination, or at least Obi Wan thinks it is. Just another (non-canon-breaking) possibility.
@KefkaticFanatic: Because they're meant to look like wooden marionnetes, similar to "the thunderbirds" and other similar serial TV shows that Lucas grew up watching. That was announced back before the series started, but anyone who wasn't paying attention back then understandably isn't aware of it.
@sansa: Maybe it's a hallucination? Qui-Gon doesn't say anything that Obi-Wan might not already know or suspect. (Yes, it's a straw, and yes, I'm grasping just a little bit. ;-)
@aswearengen: Yes there were, you just weren't paying attention because the awful script made everything seem bad by association.
@morodrim: Some people are less focused on "what happens next" and more on "how does it happen, who does it happen to, and how do they try to deal with it."
@Sci-fi-Chic: Like it? Yes. Think it was as good as the first two? No. Lucas' storytelling took a nosedive when he a) got kids and b) no longer had to worry about whether or not the movie would tank. Now that computers can do anything he can dream up, he puts even less effort into getting the script right—as long…
@HeartBurnKid: Agent of R.O.A.C.H.: Darth Maul wasn't a character. He was an extended series of stunts grafted to the far end of a lightsaber.