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FilmBuff's Replies
When someone is as uninformed as you, and spouting nonsense seemingly at random, it's impossible to know where they stand on anything. That you are Jewish is immaterial.
But of course you're on the side of Hamas. They're also mass-murdering, immoral monsters, just like Mangione. Genocide? lol
As a whole, we HAVE done something about it. We've elected a competent and capable president, who will take office next month.
Ahhh, so "The Jews" are behind it all? Is that where all of this is leading? is that your mythical genocide?
Suddenly we're talking about genocides? What genocide is happening that I'm unaware of? What do tax cuts have to do with any of this?
It's wrong to murder. It's wrong to celebrate murder.
If everyone went out and killed whoever they think is "the bad guy" it would be a very terrible world to live in. We have laws in place to prevent exactly that. When someone like Mangione breaks those laws, he deserves swift and severe punishment, and anyone who can't see that is inarguably a sociopath.
We can argue about tax cuts, foreign policy, or anything else, and if we disagree, it's possible that we each have a valid stance. If you believe it's a good thing for someone to gun someone down in the streets , you do not have a valid stance.
The entire country is not celebrating it. The overwhelming majority of people agree with me, that murder is always wrong, and we don't want to live in a society of misguided vigilantes, meting out what they see as justice against anyone they personally believe deserves death.
You and I have no idea what Brian Thompson did or didn't do. If he was guilty of crimes, there's a system in place to handle that. Whether he was a billionaire or a homeless pauper is immaterial.
Who's paying them, and why? I don't think they are paid trolls. I think they are being genuine, and they've been raised without a moral compass. Anyone who celebrates the murder of another person has deep psychological problems that are likely incurable at this stage of his life. Someone, somewhere failed him, maybe his parents, maybe schools, maybe the entire system of society, and he's not alone. There are many, many people who are deriving joy from the suffering of others, and have fully convinced themselves that they are "the good guys" for feeling that way.
What an inhuman response. This has nothing to do with any ruling class. This is about living in a society where murder is never allowed, let alone celebrated.
That man had a wife and children, and friends and family. If he committed a crime, there are systems in place to see that he's given a fair trial and punished if found guilty.
These films all blur together for me, with a few notable exceptions. Also, it's interesting how highly ranked On Her Majesty's Secret Service is. That film long had the reputation of being the undisputed worst Bond movie of all time, but opinions have clearly changed over time.
Were I ranking them, I'd put Goldfinger, From Russia With Love, Casino Royale, Dr. No, and Thunderball at top in some order or other, and then group pretty much everything else together as one. If I rewatched, or in some cases watched for the first time, these films I could probably offer more, but for the most part they feel like the same movie over and over.
Whatever he is, he did a horrible thing and deserves immediate, severe punishment that will discourage others from following his example. And all the crazy left-wing activists who are praising him ought to reevaluate their world view, though I think they are too far beyond help to ever do so.
I watched it last night. I enjoyed it to a point, but it tries to shift gears at one point, and it felt like an unearned twist. Best I can say is that if you want to watch a movie that feels like M. Night Shyamalan's mashup of National Lampoon's European Vacation and Midsommar, this is the film for you.
It isn't bad, but the original is far superior. I rank Cat People among the best horror films of all time.
I never did find out what movie this is.
Just who was that bartender?
Any Hong Kong action film fans here who can help me out?
I wonder if the story about Heinlein saying that is true.
It's certainly a fact that they knew one another. They were both well-known science fiction writers, and they both lived in Los Angeles at the same time. As the previous poster mentioned, they were both represented by the same agent, Forrest J. Ackerman, who was most known as the editor of Famous Monsters of Filmland, and no doubt encountered one another at conventions and such.
You have a strange idea of normal. He did many abnormal things, all of which set our country back by decades.
He's the modern-day equivalent for sure.
I watched only 7 films that were sequels or reboots of some sort of existing properties. 3 were really good, 1 was pretty good, 3 weren't very good.
The Fall Guy - Loved It
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga - Loved It
Deadpool & Wolverine - Loved It
Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire - Liked it
Inside Out 2 - Didn't Like It
Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire - Didn't Like It
Transformers One - Didn't Like It
Often they're unaware that there was a previous version!
I'm not too sure about that-- of those 12, the only one that seems to have been any good was the one superhero film, Deadpool & Wolverine.