What main characters die?
Cassia?
shareYep...and Milo.
In fact.. everyone.
Your answer: http://youtu.be/74BzSTQCl_c?t=10s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y45x1OJI6SM
LOL, I'm glad I saw your post because I was just about to post the exact same thing.
End Of Line.
GREAT response! It's more cataclysmic than "Titanic" - EVERYBODY dies (sorta like, "Mars Attacks!" 😛 )!!!
shareeveryone
shareAll.
shareThe horse might have made it.
shareThough it isn't shown, the horse would have died too. Top speed for horses for an extended time would clock no higher 35-40 mph while a pyroclastic flows go anywhere from 60-150 mph.
shareYeah, I felt bad. For the horse.
The romance/melodrama plot was ridiculous in so many ways. The first half of the film was almost unwatchable. Even the second half was ridiculous: Pompeii perished under a rain of white volcanic ash, "Not with a bang, but with a whimper." It was Herculaneum that perished under a pyrocaustic flow. The volcanic bombs were noticed at sea, but were not a major cause of death. The tsunami is very questionable; it wouldn't have affected Pompeii (which was a ways inland) and archaeology shows that it didn't affect the arcades on the seashore of Herculaneum, so probably a tsunami doesn't belong in this movie at all.
There is a documentary about Pompeii that did an excellent job. For one thing, it showed people dying in the streets, and then flashed to the plaster casts made of their bodies by achaeologists. Very touching and effective. . . and true.
Pretend something clever is written here.
It was Herculaneum that perished under a pyrocaustic flow.
it wouldn't have affected Pompeii (which was a ways inland)
There is a documentary about Pompeii that did an excellent job. For one thing, it showed people dying in the streets, and then flashed to the plaster casts made of their bodies by achaeologists. Very touching and effective. . . and true.
Thanks for correcting "pyrocaustic." I was thinking of the Roman hypocausts (heated floors.)
However I stand by my statement that the pyroclastic flow didn't strike Pompeii. If you have a source to cite, I'd love to read it.
I always figure that the first person to speak doesn't need to prove anything, but if you go out of your way to say that someone is wrong, then you should back it up.
Also, Pompeii was not on the coast, although it was nearer the coast than it is now. It was on a river and there was a port at the mouth of that river, but the city itself was not a port. It's analogous to Rome/Tiber/Ostia. This might be just a matter of semantics; I'm not going to worry about it.
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Pretend something clever is written here.
However I stand by my statement that the pyroclastic flow didn't strike Pompeii. If you have a source to cite, I'd love to read it.
I always figure that the first person to speak doesn't need to prove anything, but if you go out of your way to say that someone is wrong, then you should back it up.
Also, Pompeii was not on the coast, although it was nearer the coast than it is now. It was on a river and there was a port at the mouth of that river, but the city itself was not a port. It's analogous to Rome/Tiber/Ostia. This might be just a matter of semantics; I'm not going to worry about it.
You are VASTLY understating the speed of a pyroclasic flow. It can actually reach speeds of up to 700 km/h(that's 450 mph). There's no way they should have even made it to the spot where they have their kiss.
Prof. Farnsworth: Oh. A lesson in not changing history from Mr. I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!
Hahaha! But, no, I don't think he made it either.
Nice one.
shareAll of them.
shareEverybody.
"Oh lord, Do we have the strength to carry on this task in one night? Or are we just jerking off."
Everyone dies, except a horse.
X ~We are the people our parents warned us about
All Men Must Die
share