the view out the window bothered me too until I rationalized it to be merely a screensaver on a big flat screen. or a view from a remote camera positioned on the center ring of the quantum drive.
the view out the window bothered me too until I rationalized it to be merely a screensaver on a big flat screen. or a view from a remote camera positioned on the center ring of the quantum drive.
what a hussy! Showing her bloomers like that in public!
go see “A Piece of the Action”
Sarah Paulson gets automatic geek love for being the “message” in Serenity.
^^^ Agree. no body said who had the original idea, but I’ll bet it was Spock when he found out about Pike’s accident. Spock had relayed Kirk’s strength of will to the Talosians so the thought that the fiction of a court martial would keep him occupied until it was too late.
James,
I agree with most everything you’ve said with the possible exception that the lowest point on the TF franchise came a bit later in the moie when Stanley Tucci stopped at the end of a chase to basically do a commercial for coconut water or whatever it was that the Chinese can’t get enough of.
I’m going to be “that Guy”...
here’s a weird thing... Little Stephan gets the bunny back from dad’s office and puts it back under the bed - but out at the front.
it was entertaining I guess, but they overlooked the most realistic outcome
wow. triggered much? read the rest, “Sweetie”
no, the phrase was INVENTED by a critic to differentiate killing a woman from killing a man to motivate a plot. and it wasn’t done for any other reason than to make the critic sound clever. That person belongs in the same circle of hell as the person who came up with “Bennifer”
Now for an encore, reveal to the people how the black hero in “Get Out” only survived because of his ability to pick cotton (from the chair stuffing that he used to block the hypnotism)
stop saying “Fridged” it just makes you look like a film school wannabe desperate to show that the student debt you wracked up is really paying off.
but what you are not taking into account are all of the factors that happen on the business side. Actors’ contracts will often dictate how big they appear on the poster, how big the name of the studio will be, whether or not key plot elements will be depicted etc... Your “far superior” poster example is graphically…
isn’t that the “Prime Directive”?
substitute “British” with “American” and you get a picture of life in “the colonies”
does that 521 years include the 300+ years that Michael has been torturing our heroes? Or is it 2018 - 521?
insert obligatory “girl-bot has nice set of headlights” joke here
my criteria has always been - from the 2005 reboot on - is if the actors name appeared in the zoomy credits at the beginning, they are companions
Add to section 31 the cabal of officers who wanted to assassinate chancellor Gorkon.