the-asinus
Asinus
the-asinus

And domestic violence!
(Sorry, I just got around to paying any attention to my album)

I didn't mean that I was intending to justify the morality, just that it's possible to reframe the bleak, violent, amorality of it into something interesting even if the viewer believes that Miller thinks its awesome and is intending to offer up these characters as ideals.

I have to divorce the author from the material to enjoy the film, but I think it's definitely possible to find commentary on the role violence and brutality and the importance of order in the film. It demonstrates that without some kind of reliable center, where the traditional structures of order have become sources

The visual style is still pretty brilliant and one of my go-to examples of using green screen well. I like how it leveraged the fakeness of a CG world into a strength by using it to create a world that wasn't supposed to look real. Matching the world with costumes and makeup that would have looked jarringly out of

I TiVo half the shows on the VJBN.

He was known for that, but it was all rumor-based because he refused to do it for anyone in person lest the hounding for the impression would never cease! "Oh, do the line from Catch 22!"

I hadn't watched that trailer yet— that CG fight scene looked awful. If it were all CG, it wouldn't have been such a jarring shift. Just make cartoons, god damn it.

Gynocyst

Didn't he say something, like, if someone is unconscious, they can't say "no," so there can be no rape?

Third time— you'll forget forever…
     …forever
               …forever

Do you think he's especially not a genius?

I still don't know!

Did anyone else think that maybe the joke about Salinger faking his death to further avoid the public eye might have been a tacit admission that he faked his death and was now playing himself on a Netflix cartoon? I mean… I didn't think that. "Anyone else" referred to some dummy I work with… not me. Heh.

I didn't see what was so bad about it compared to everything else. I don't have a lot of deep reverence for the first two, so maybe that had something to do with it. I thought it was kind of an interesting take on the story and liked the concept of Skynet as a non-centralized, distributed computer (and that Judgment

It helps us find the important words.
"hhmm.. words words… oh! 'Song Title…' This is about song titles!"

Movie Exec: "I have a letter here from a little japanese boy named Dik Achu, and he writes, 'God forbid any of the current plethora of once-great film franchises ever be put out of its misery." Exec removes prescriptionless glasses and wipes his face where he has seen sad people wipe their faces and sniffs, again,

The heart is just a big pump— it can pump the sand right out. Why do you think our hearts aren't full of sand and dust and twigs and bugs? Pumps 'em right out!

I had it for my computer back in the day, but it was exactly as hard as the NES version. A friend of mine and I paused Top Secret Episode for hours at a time to finally get to the Hitler clones. It killed us, and then we started the demoralizing "die and go back a level" that begins in the later chapters. We never

It's about fairness in ninjutsu reporting!