It would lose money from all the people who don’t like going to theaters and want to see the show in the privacy of their own homes.
It would lose money from all the people who don’t like going to theaters and want to see the show in the privacy of their own homes.
That’s honestly a bad idea. At least for us. It would be a return to the old days when the studios owned the theaters and had a stranglehold over the whole process. You might be thinking, “Netflix won’t own all the theaters, just a few,” but although it’s unlikely Netflix could put all the major studios out of…
Damn your hide, man, I’ll miss him too! But he’s going to be busy sailing round the Cape of Good Hope, and around the horn!
I assume he did those Thor movies and Transformers for the money and I don’t blame him for phoning it in with those pieces of shit. When he’s in something good, he brings it.
Season One was very repetitive and obvious, hopefully Season Two can give us something more. If it turns out the park is just on an island, that’s one more nail in the coffin. It’s an idea that worked as a movie, but an amusement park that goes haywire, and the idea of an A.I. trying to emerge but being kept down,…
I can’t believe they’re doing a second season when they didn’t have enough material for the first one. It maybe works for a movie, but is about things by now done to death.
I guess I must be colder than you because that scene with Desmond and Penny did nothing for me. Taken out of context, to someone who had given up on the show long before that point, it means nothing.
Most episodes do not drag, that’s what’s great about the freedom was standard run times - you can make it as long or as short as the story requires.
A sequel might be nice, they could deal with the impossibility of actually transferring your consciousness - the idea that a copy of you lives forever, but you don’t get to.
Congrats. Along with 99.9% of everyone else who saw it. The 99.9 instead of 100 is just to account for any Forrest Gumps out there who might have seen it.
The hamfisted way they tore down that “fanboy” culture bothered me - that one dude couldn’t hack the system, but Nanette does it in two seconds.
He would be found long before he starved to death. I don’t see how he could die inside the game, his mind is his brain and that’s linked to the game but not only inside it - it’s a bit like saying if you die in a dream you die in real life.
I share your objections, but the only one that really mattered is how he gave their recreations their memories. That seems like magic, which existed in The Twilight Zone but I guess now exists in the Black Mirror as well. I do think it would have been better to have them die at the end.
I guess Zack isn’t a fan of Futurama, as this episode also reminded me of “Where No Fan Has Gone Before” where the original series Star Trek actors were forced to act out an alien’s fan script. Of course there’s the probable influence of Ellison’s story, but there’s of course a long history of stories of gods and the…
I guess some people just didn’t get it, but that’s okay - it wasn’t really made for you.
There was plenty going on, if you were paying attention.
Yes, I liked it a lot. The lack of moralizing, and keeping some mystery, was refreshing - I guess some people, like “A Rising Ape,” are put off when they’re not coddled and led from point to point. When an episode raises above the Kindergarten level it scares them.
That’s what Ape wants. He’s angry, and combined with a limited intellect - well, you get yet another Comic Book Guy type. This is probably the closest the poor bastard gets to social interaction.
Thinking is not Rising Ape’s strong suit.
So, you’re not very bright, why do we need to know that?