Didn't they actually play 'I don't want to set the world on fire' at one point? That was an actual song from one of the original Fallouts.
Didn't they actually play 'I don't want to set the world on fire' at one point? That was an actual song from one of the original Fallouts.
The problem is that the core concept of TWD is broken. A dumb southern sheriff's deputy would become a saviour in an apocalypse. No, he'd be a dumb sheriff's deputy dumbassing his way around.
Thinking about it further, Back to the Future was sneakily good with the food porn. The corn flakes in the 50's diner George was eating for some reason made me crave Frosties, that beautiful rehydrated pizza and the ceiling fruit in BTTF2 and that hearty looking rabbit stew in BTTF3. Mmm!
Yes!
Calling milk 'du lait' instead of 'milk' makes it instantly more desirable.
Return to Oz if anyone remembers that film. There was a scene where young Fairuza Balk sits down with the Mountain King or what not after wandering the barren landscape for days and is fed limestone pie and molten silver. I mean, none of it was actually food nor edible but it looked so damn appetizing. Goes to show…
Plus there was a war on. Ruining it like that was extreme decadence. Serves him right for getting his head carved at the end. And the Jew hunting, ofcourse.
I wish I got forced into doing something for $7million.
Smith.
He comes across as curt.
I would say that JP felt like a kids movie due to the role of the two children. I felt that they were included for children watching the film to empathise with and relate to. I think a poster somewhere else on this discussion touched on the adult themes issue in that their inclusion in a film doesn't necessarily make…
Hey! Don't force your human-centric body ideals on others!
I know that says 'desert' with a single 's' but I can't help mentally adding the extra 's' and imagining a Tatooine made entirely of Creme Brulee.
More "Pew Pew Pew" and less "I killed them! I killed them all!".
Why? Can a kid's movie not deal with the issue of loss? Or the themes of isolation and mistrust in the wider world? Those are all things I would like my kids to be aware of. Having those subjects present in a movie doesn't make the movie any less for children.
But they also released tie-in merchandise to accompany the original film aimed specifically for children. Compared that to, say, Schindler's List. I don't think a SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Amon Goeth action figure with rifle sounds would have been such a hot item. That in no way invalidates adults liking it films aimed at…
Episode 1 is definitely a kid's movie and most of them are aimed at adolescents. Empire and Return of the Sith were pretty dark, though, so they probably get a pass. I mean I like Star Wars and I don't judge anyone else for liking it/not liking it but they are what they are. Star Wars probably gets singled out more…
They promised me dog or better!
I wouldn't say it was sympathetic as such. I think the point of the movie was to laugh and mock the terrorists beyond the faceless caricature they are often seen as. It portrays their human side and shows that their human side is just as stupid and imbecilic. Even the intelligent leader character is someone who is…
Odenkirk played the straight man to perfection.