“chosen one” and “aristocratic” aren’t the same thing.
“chosen one” and “aristocratic” aren’t the same thing.
Make Alderaan Great Again
Anakin’s character arch has a clear sense to it, he’d lost his mentor, his wife, his order, and had been horrifically burned.
Also, I really loved Johnson’s point that The Force is not some aristocratic thing, but something even the humblest kid can manage if he really wants to.
I’d say it packs the better punch.
Sometimes (maybe more often than not) to the movies’ detriment.
But why on earth is the protagonist named Cole Young?
Lewis Tan may have Asian heritage, but “Cole Young” sounds like the warmup act for the opening act for Luke Bryan.
GTFOH with that “people make decisions in a vacuum” mentality. HGTV sold the idea that “anyone” can turn 75k into 200k and then 200k into 500k etc. with their house flipping shows. When people are consistently bombarded with bad information some of the responsibility falls on the presenters of that bad information.
I think that it’s unfair to put all of that responsibility on HGTV.
Depends on your interpretation of the Ship of Theseus. But my point is just that it’s used, as an adage, in its own contexts completely separate from Wolfe, while “to kill a mockingbird” is not. So comparing the two in an attempt to classify “You can’t go home again” as not an adage is kind of absurd.
Eating this is kinda like the prophet Ezekiel eating the scrolls on which he’d written his prophecies except instead of ingesting the Word of the Lord it’s the contact info for Liberty Medical
Column A, column B I’d guess. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the size required a different mix, or at least ratio, of the ingredients. I’d be even less surprised if the candy manufacturers didn’t cheap out on making these big novelty gummies as well.
It’s used that way in the novel, but I don’t know if Lee was taking an actual adage and using it or if she created it for the story, as I have never heard the phrase used outside the context of the novel or film. That’s the point I was making: “You can’t go home again” is used on its own, apart from Wolfe; “It’s a sin…
Assuming BD Wong plays a psychiatrist, although I’m not sure how such a character would fit into the show.
It’s kind of like calling “to kill a mockingbird” an ‘old adage.’