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dmac8's Replies


there's way too much time between when the kid first sees him and impact. there would be no time to slowly pull the kid back into the cab with so little distance left. but it's a movie so you suspend disbelief. there's a dip in the road. they didn't see each other until it was too late at that speed. He didn't. He used the nitrous to rocket himself back to the action but he didn't see the truck coming back the other way. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_UtDuZaeZo Matthew Abaddon https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/hamilton_2020 4. Open Water (2003) I'm having the same problem Architect INTJ-t in that case, I'd go with Dolores Claiborne which Black Friday? Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) The Manchurian Candidate (1962) Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005) 11. Braveheart (1995) 5. Texas Flood - Stevie Ray Vaughan 2. Charlton Heston - True Lies (1994) marathon on TCM it has to be on the page first. no one takes a shitty script and transforms it thru direction and casting. a handheld cam is a shaky cam. those have been in use since 1958 with the beginning of the French New Wave. yeah, the oh-so-popular MC is a great indicator of what the masses think. Hard to say. The question that had already loomed large before Covid-19 has been pushed to the brink. What might stop the slide in theater going? Eat-in places haven't done the trick. Maybe a different brand of escapist cinema will bloom from the rubble of the pandemic. Who knows? Personally, I have superhero movie fatigue -- especially from the edgeless variety. But I'll bet we'll see a few more movies where your neighbor might be the problem. it could be in horror or other genres. when something leaves a dent in the culture as this has, it has a way of showing up in art in some manner. and it doesn't have to be so on-the-nose as to depict an actual pandemic or measures taken to prevent one.