Kurtzman isn’t the most ideal choice but Star Trek has survived worse. Heck, the first season of TNG was run by a sexual harasser who drove Gates McFadden to leave the show.
Kurtzman isn’t the most ideal choice but Star Trek has survived worse. Heck, the first season of TNG was run by a sexual harasser who drove Gates McFadden to leave the show.
The show is very genuine. The characters are portrayed as real people with complexity and depth, not caricatures.
That psychic battle between David and Farouk, wow. We need more of those.
But this game won’t let you argue with a stop sign, therefore it is far inferior to Bloodlines.
Wonder Woman Beyond, where she has to team up with Terry McGinnis to battle an alliance between Ra’s al Ghul, Poison Ivy, and Cheetah who are trying to destroy human civilization and restore the “natural order.”
It’s the only ship to make the kegel run in less than 12 parsecs.
I’m pretty sure there’s an episode of Star Trek or Twilight Zone or maybe Buffy with this exact same premise.
Suspension of disbelief was exactly what I was describing. When you’re ignoring the fact that these are made up stories with actors playing roles, you’re suspending your disbelief. So my point is, why can’t people suspend their disbelief a tiny bit more and not think about how Disney/Marvel has sequels planned? How is…
That’s good to know since I made the same point as you.
Way to miss the point.
But who cares if people are predicting the upcoming movies? Why do you have to let that affect your movie going experience? Just put that in the same box you put your knowledge of the fact that none of it is real or gossip you’ve heard about the actors or bad practices by the studio or corruption in Hollywood or any…
Because of suspension of disbelief. I can pretend that a movie is not just a bunch of actors playing make belief and invest in the characters and stories as if they’re real. Not worrying about sequels or how they’ll bring characters back is just one tiny step further than what everyone is already doing in order to…
Why does that matter? This is fiction. There are no real stakes in any movie. If you’re fine with watching movies without racking your brains about how they’re made up stories, with actors pretending to be people they aren’t, using props painted up to look good, on sets generated by computers, how hard is it to take a…
There are no stakes in any movie because they’re all made up stories with actors playing make belief.
They should do a “No Man’s Land” story arc that crosses over all the Netflix shows.
At the end of Ant-Man and the Wasp, they rescue Hope’s mother from the Quantum Realm and right before she’s about to reunite with Hank, they both turn to dust.
It’s fiction, none of these people are real. No died, no one was ever alive. There are no consequences to any fictional stories ever. Moby Dick wasn’t real, Wizard of Oz wasn’t real, The Godfather wasn’t real, etc. But if you can suspend your disbelief enough to watching a made up story about events that never…
Who cares if we all know that these characters are coming back? They’re not real, none of them are dead or alive. You’re already suspending your disbelief watching a movie where actors pretend to have super powers, what’s so hard about going that tiny extra step and not worry about sequels?
Jessica is sitting in a bar and her booze slowly turns to dust.
We know from earlier this season that Syd’s powers don’t just work on humans. But to what extent? Can she switch minds/souls with an insect? And if her powers extend beyond humans then her discomfort with being touched likely extends beyond humans too. And there is life everywhere. The implications are quite horrific.