This Movie Is Terrible


I was young when I saw it. It was the only movie I ever slept through in the theatres! Why do you guys like it so much?

Person:A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
Me:Whoops.

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wow..you wasted your time...

"hey howdy hey! thats me on a yoyo!"




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[deleted]

But why don't you like the film? Reasons?!

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I like the film, but some parts are cheesy and I just want to stab Little Creek and that Colonel. Friggin' cardboard cutouts.

I think the movie would've been better without Spirit narrating... it gets annoying. For example, when his voice popped up out of nowhere as he tried to comfort Rain. Thanks for stating the obvious and ruining the moment of silence.

But the music and animation are awesome.

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I disagree about the narrating voice. When I went into this movie, I was afraid that the narrating voice could get annoying, but it didn't (for me). I also liked the fact that the narrating voice didn't appeared the whole time - that could have been annoying.

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Yes it is a very emotional film, I don't know how anyone could sleep though it. I must have seen it more than 20 times and I never, never get bored of it. Best movie of 2002.

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The narration is badly written at a lot of parts and Matt Damon is NOT a good narrator, he sounded stilted and robotic the whole film. They should have found a much more natural-sounding voice and used less narration.

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This movie came out five years ago, you'd still have to be young to have been young when you saw it.

But anyways, what didn't you like about it?

Leah
is really strange.

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Yes, what is there not to like?

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everybody has their different tastes..even though i liked this movie..there was quite a few things not in my liking...of course..it depends on people..






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What did you not like?

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Here's one... thousands of men died building a railroad with their bare hands through the Icy passes of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. They had no modern equipment, power tools, or dynamite. They were paid little, and the Chinese workers of the Central Pacific made a name for themwselves by doing mining work on shear rock faces with a material known as "Black Powder". How danergerous this stuff is gets lost on a generation brought up by ammunition you can throw around without it going off. Truth is, we have no clue how many died building this... all in a concerted effort to unite the West Coast to the rest of the US of A so that people could get across the countryside and have it be an adventure- not a funeral procession. I'll allow they had no right to build it through Indian lands... but our country HAD TO HAVE IT- or we wouldn't survive. Proof of that came 80 some years later....

During WW2, the German U-boats sailed up and down the Atlnatic and Gulf Coasts (right off where I live here in Hampton Roads)... sinking every ship they could. The "evil" transcontinental railroads became the most dependable way to move stuff cross country (No Free ways back then folks)...

so 130 years later the town, state, and country it built will produce a movie that thinks destroying a railroad camp is a "good" thing. Yep, that makes a lot of sense. Just remember something, the freeways and roads U drive out west were only possible 'cuz railroads brought the materials there.

But you know what I really LOVE about this movie... the music is kinda cool. (Hans Zimmer I mean... I don't like Bryan Admas).... and though the movie shows the US military in such a bad light- the US Air Force plays a couple songs from this score in their presentations of flight with F-16 Falcons :)

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It's pretty decent. Nothing groundbreaking, but not everything has to be.

Supermodels...spoiled stupid little stick figures mit poofy lips who sink only about zemselves.

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I love the way the Indians used to run hundreds of buffalo at a time over a cliff, maiming many of them. Hmmmm...wonder why the movie didn't portray this?

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Apart from it was the Americans who killed millions of Bison, without using their meat or skins.

Marvin: You William Blake?
William Blake: Yes, I am. Do you know my poetry?

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[deleted]

i feel sorry for you.

We can watch the world devoured in its pain

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