A buck fifty soaked, hate away.
A buck fifty soaked, hate away.
Unless your name is Hitchcock or Kubrick, then you make your own.
Agreed, it feels more like a design choice than an adaptive one and the game suffers for it (among other things) but that is par for the course with WD. I wish they had decided to recreate the vacant spaces that open up in downtown when night falls, just like TDK but I guess how Chris Nolan portrays things isn't good…
The rain effects, building colors, how many structures weren't over five stories, intersections were wide open with the curbs given copious amounts of space, the open air structures, etc, etc. I could see New York river front but the claustraphobic feeling of Chi-Town was pretty non-existant.
Eh close, but way more Oh Dai Su.
Feels. More. Like. Miami. Better?
Feels more like Miami.
Replace "safer" with "less relevant" and you'd prolly be correct.
Actually I am registered with the WGA with several projects, I've had several scripts cross the desks at both Paramount and Sony, and I didn't register this particular project with the WGA because it would involve getting the rights to films by the Kubrick Estate along with the numerous film companies who owned the…
Eh, beats the paw print of my recently passed cat; Caesar. But will cost far less methinks.
History Of Violence and Eastern Promises are exercises in restraint driven film from someone who built a career around the faster cuts and FX derived film that has more or less overcome him. Cronenberg is the real genius in the house these days, in one man's humble opinion.
I guess someone didn't even bother watching the film in question, best of luck next time.
Cronenberg's prime has yet be defined.
Cost/risk is the biggest problem mankind will ever face. And at that point we are total assholes unless you believe a life is lesser than the sum of the whole.
I don't recall saying that, care to enlighten me on where I didn't say that?
In case you didn't bother to watch the whole video, the crew of Columbia (and Challenger for that matter) weren't given a choice. They were told everything was fine and they'd return home safe despite trying to find a solution.
Cute, care to give a talk to the children of fallen astronauts about how important their lives were over a debris strike or an o-ring failure?
I'm sure "miles driven" is an acceptable metric for those who died because getting someone into orbit is far more important than safety.
I think your definition of "statistically insignificant" is sorely lacking.
Naw, both best and worst in one master stroke.