Exactly. If only "monsters" can do "monstrous" things, then "ordinary" people CAN'T have done something even if accused by someone you trust…
Exactly. If only "monsters" can do "monstrous" things, then "ordinary" people CAN'T have done something even if accused by someone you trust…
good save
I don't know it, but I have my suspicions. The idea that she's not really a prisoner, but that because he's a man and acts as though he has authority over her in that time period that others won't question is my most popular idea…
Hardly any mention of Daisy, means she's either a big player they didn't want to spoil or JJL wasn't really that remarkable.
So calling them homicidal seems a bit much. The dinosaurs escape and eat people, but the monster roams the land becoming lonelier and lonelier until finally his loneliness turns to rage.
AVA on the other hand seeks to escape the objectified prison she's encased in, and that desperation for freedom is enough that she's…
Yeah, I went back and fourth between wondering if Gordon was supposed to be a Keyzer Soze figure or a wronged man who turned to an especially disturbing form of revenge.
She wanted freedom. Frankenstein wanted friends.
Interesting, so before the divorce?
I still want to see this. Taissa Farmiga has been showing major acting chops lately.
I can't see anyone calling It Follows "pedestrian," not liking it is okay, but the soundtrack and the camerawork combined with the strange "lost youth" vibe is the essence of a unique and inspired film imo.
Uh, interesting how you call the "technology" the "wrong" one, and not the creator.
I don't think you can blame environment. Killing your brother's daughter because you believe in family is twisted beyond repair
Ex Machina was the only film I saw this year that really made me reflect on what movies can do with their subject matter. The ending genuinely seems like it will be held up as a truly saying something important about humanity.
Oh, and I forgot how weird it was that Lou and Hank brought up the aliens in front of his wife and she acted like they were talking about the weather…
He was like Gus Grimly but utterly capable instead of tormented.
Bear's dead to me for killing Simone like that. Such an awful justification, especially when your brother is constantly devaluing her.
I just didn't like this season as much as the first. The reviewer said that the characters changed but I felt like they main ones stayed the same, and the ones that DID change seemed to be ignored until near the very end.
Made me think of Little Chayton from Banshee.
It's amazing a book written by a woman about man's folly and the people who suffer from it could be turned into a lite bromance but damn Hollywood, you keep making my week!
How do you think he got the money to pay them?