People are still being slaughtered, but the non-sensical methods and circumstance by which they die is being given a "logical" framework by the overarching Lovecraftian sacrifice story in service to a meta analysis/critique.
People are still being slaughtered, but the non-sensical methods and circumstance by which they die is being given a "logical" framework by the overarching Lovecraftian sacrifice story in service to a meta analysis/critique.
The Thing (2011) was not a remake, it was a prequel to the The Thing (1982)
You are both a gentle(wo)man and a scholar.
I'm reluctant to. I don't like watching the American version of great foreign thrillers (The Vanishing, Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Let the Right One In).
I think Caché was supposed to go over our heads. It was intentionally obtuse to redirect away from the central mystery when it really simply wants to explore the human side of the whole endeavor.
Whether or not you were scared or humored did it entertain you?
Thought I was the only one that saw that film.
I really enjoyed the film not because it made me laugh or cringe (it did both), but because it fully engaged me and entertained me.
Spot on.
And baking.
SHUT IT!!
Could have been truthful, but non-relevant.
Yes, but Morgan's decision not to kill those that are a clear danger to everyone in the group/town is reminiscent of Lizzie's delusion about zombies being friendly. His personal agenda puts a lot of people in danger.
In the middle of a raid the pragmatic choice is to dispatch all marauders until the situation is under control. Plus, how much credible intel can one glean from a blood covered lunatic with a W carved in their forehead?
But he's gone too far the other side.
Don't you mean Mockquaman?
I agree that it was better than the first film.
More with Suzanne Tedeschi. That episode was brilliant.
It never happened because the series ended with season 7's finale.
We all will be soon. The Supreme Court said so.