That's why I drink water, fish fuck in it.
That's why I drink water, fish fuck in it.
Actually, her complaint was that he said it too "meh, i'm out of ammo", not that he refused to shoot her again. She was complaining that no one in that scene acted as if their lives where on the line.Like Nick not shooting the bad lady. She interprets "I'm out" as him refusing to shoot, but that's just wrong. He meant "out of ammo". You can hear the click and the accompanying musical cue just before he says it.
It had some solid concepts riding it, too. Hang on, I'll discuss this behind a spoiler tag.I'm with Nick. It wasn't terrible, but I wouldn't call it "good" either.
One last thing that doesn't need to a spoiler tag: I still don't get if this and the original Cloverfield tie in with 10 Cloverfield Lane. So far, I see no indications it's in the same universe.
The husband texts John Goodman's character at one point and asks to use his bunker, which is where he takes the little girl
I saw it as more of a tales from the crypt type of thing. Nods and easter eggs rather than any solid canonical tie-insI wondered that. That's an even lazier way to tie it in, then.
I saw it as more of a tales from the crypt type of thing. Nods and easter eggs rather than any solid canonical tie-ins
Personally, I thought the explanation was perfectly reasonable.Strange things happening without explanation.
As to the arm...I got nothing. I loved it and thought it gave Chris O'Dowd some GREAT lines, but it didn't make sense, especially when it wrote stuff.
I wrote both of these off as being because they're in a paradox where the laws of physics and logic no longer applyI was satisfied with the Cloverfield Paradox .
Not as good as 10 Cloverfield Lane perhaps but time well spent watching it.
I was somewhat surprised by the events ofthe room filling with water. When the door blew out I was really expecting the entire contents of the room to get blasted out into space and not instantly freeze. That didn't seem quite right.
I think I missed something when Mundy was killed by the magnetic field.
Everything metal was being pulled towards the far end of the room by the intense magnetic force including the repair substance which was being pulled towards him.
Just as it looked like it was about to spear him through the back, it grabbed him and pulled him in instead.
Personally, I thought the explanation was perfectly reasonable.
No, seriously, that's the explanation, and I think it works. It's a play on pareidolia, apophenia, and the like. These are random things happening by the space-time of two (or more) universes colliding. Space and time are being warped, connections are made and broken, and this is a group of humans desperately trying to make sense of the noise. Humans that have been in cramped quarters for two years with incredible stress on them. I thought the movie did a fantastic job of taking what's usually done by some intelligent evil force, and making it done by the random warping of space-time.
Also, fair enough if you don't think it has a strong enough connection to Cloverfield. I'm not sure why that matters. Maybe I don't care because I thought Cloverfield was merely okay, but I loved 10 Cloverfield Lane. It doesn't matter to me if 10CL or TCP continue the story of Cloverfield, and I don't feel cheated or harmed in any way just because they dare to be loosely connected.
It's a disaster movie. This is like complaining that all the destruction in the Poseidon Adventure only happened to kill people off.I guess my issue is, except for the weird stuff in the middle, it largely plays as a straight sci-fi movie, as a human drama involving parallel dimensions. The final confrontation had no weird stuff going on, so the only reason the weird stuff occurred was to kill people off. How could the ships merge if only one was sent spiraling so far away? The weirdness isn't consistent with the rest of the logic the movie is trying to show. Weird stuff can happen in a movie, but it still needs to fit into its own universe's logic. This was basically the equivilent of Joe Quesada saying, "It's magic. We don't need to explain it" as a way to hand wave anything that didn't make sense."
Disaster movies rely on large groups of people dying, not a small handful. And usually have a small core cast that are developed enough so that when THEY die, you care about them. Or certainly the other people around them care. The best example, of course, is Alien, which spends the first good third of the movie familiarizing yourself with the characters. And when each of them die, it's a MAJOR break for the characters. Another example is last year's Life, which wasn't great, but it took the time to familiarize the characters and they were upset when one of them died. Here, they move on so quickly, you'd think they forgot about the person they just spent half a decade with.It's a disaster movie. This is like complaining that all the destruction in the Poseidon Adventure only happened to kill people off.
I don't really have anything else to say. I just disagree with you about almost everything, but it's purely subjective reasoning.
They should, considering her heritage. Here's Melanie Griffith (Dakota's mom) in Nobody's Fool.Also Dakota Johnson's boobies remain as wonderful as ever.
It’s always nice to see Mandy Patinkin. Even when accompanied by Turtles.It was nice to see Mandy Patinkin, too.
Not in money, that is...The only saving grace was I didn't pay for the privilege.
There's not enough Harold and Maude in the world.Doris was more fun. Although, I feel that Hollywood always gives us the old guy and pretty young thing all the time and no one bats an eye.
I remember it being slow and unfunny.Bridesmaids: I didn't like it. The bathroom humor made me laugh, but I don't like cringe humor, and it was so so full of it.