jeremymullins--disqus1
Me So Soup
jeremymullins--disqus1

Maybe they were just too warm and cozy after that quilty verdict was read.

Why do you think the folks making the documentary couldn't investigate? The trials ended years ago and most of this should have been public record for them to look through. If Steven was willing to, they should have, too.

I wish the documentary would have not even provided those hints about Halbach's ex boyfriend or brother if it wasn't going to do something with it. Same to your reference to Bobby and his stepfather - just a lot of red herrings of plot, which made for even more frustration (besides just the outcome of the trials) at

*moustache ruffles*

I like the way you think.

Yeah but that [artist's rendition of Steven's] gun was mighty scary. I'm liable to have severe heart palpatations!

The way his moustache rolled over his top lip whenever he sucked in his lower lip made me want to take my eyes and put them through a meat slicer.

While I agree with you, I do believe there was some of her blood in the trunk of the vehicle.

I'm all out of stamped self-addressed stamped envelopes. And money - that went to my Netflix subscription, defense fund for Steve Avery and Brandon Dassey, and my crazy pills.

Bingo.

The getting shot part they go over rather quickly in the documentary - there was a "bubbling" and "melding" of bone fragment that is similar to the way bone reacts to a small object at high velocity. There could be scratches on vertebrae (cutting of throat) or possible fractures in wrist or forearm bones that would

Soz, pops.

SPOILERS to your response
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Perhaps the stages of development - although that could have been more thorough for me as well - but the actual ethical, moral, and sociopolitical implications of such a tool are not deeply explored here. It is very basic in its understanding of what all of the consequences are - it brought nothing new to the table

Another good point - I can get behind these two things. Okay - well I'm still cold on the film, but I didn't look at that scene like the way a couple of you have stated. Thanks!

That's a good point - I like that.

That's the great thing about film - we can respectfully disagree and have a civil discussion about it, if we choose to.

Can some please explain to me the reason why they think the dance scene in Ex Machina is good? That film was ridiculously superficial in its attempt at handling the complexity of sentient artificial intelligence, and that scene was too much - from this point forward, it felt like the only reason anything happened is

It must have been hard to make that request, considering you had to commit the same atrocity as I.

You can take that maudlin ending to Steve Jobs and shove it right up your bunghole, kind sir.