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Vahakyla posted:A lot of microwaves ding when the scheduled program starts. So the micro is not actually on before the ding goes. That might be the case with some ovens, though even my fancy Whirlpool one can't even schedule anything, but I don't think that's what most movies are showing... I seem to recall one of the Segal flicks (Under Siege 2 maybe) having a microwave explode clearly when the program is supposed to finish. Pilchenstein posted:Someone makes a bomb by sticking some stuff in a microwave and it doesn't detonate until we've heard the ding. I'm pretty sure it wouldn't work like that unless you wired an explosive to the bell. An actually reasonable use of the microwave bomb is in The Equalizer, where he sticks some gas canisters in one and then uses the circuit breaker to turn it back on, causing an explosion a couple of seconds later.
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# ? Dec 21, 2014 21:50 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:56 |
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Been watching the netflix series Marco Polo, while a rather good, if some what blatently embelished story telling I cant get over the 'Hundred Eyes' character. A blind monk who is not only the best martial artist in the land but seems to know the layout of anywhere he goes without any kind of aid. It's so cliche it hurts.
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# ? Dec 21, 2014 22:00 |
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mobby_6kl posted:I seem to recall one of the Segal flicks (Under Siege 2 maybe) having a microwave explode clearly when the program is supposed to finish. mobby_6kl posted:An actually reasonable use of the microwave bomb is in The Equalizer, where he sticks some gas canisters in one and then uses the circuit breaker to turn it back on, causing an explosion a couple of seconds later.
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# ? Dec 21, 2014 22:11 |
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mobby_6kl posted:I seem to recall one of the Segal flicks (Under Siege 2 maybe) having a microwave explode clearly when the program is supposed to finish. It's also in Grosse Pointe Blank, in the scene in the convenience store donquixotic has a new favorite as of 23:54 on Dec 21, 2014 |
# ? Dec 21, 2014 23:51 |
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I'm completely numb to action scenes. Car chases, fights, or big FX sequences, that kind of thing. I find them incredibly boring. I feel like you may as well just insert a fireworks display in the middle of a film followed by the text 'the good guy won'.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 00:03 |
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On a whim this weekend, my girlfriend and I decided to watch the new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Mistakes were made. You could just put the whole movie in this thread.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 09:29 |
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I never really understood why Charles Nichols helped the protagonist so much in the Fugitive. He went out of his way to lie to the police and give cash to the person who would eventually trace the murder of his wife back to himç Maybe i missed something?
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 10:11 |
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EvilGenius posted:I'm completely numb to action scenes. Car chases, fights, or big FX sequences, that kind of thing. I find them incredibly boring. I feel like you may as well just insert a fireworks display in the middle of a film followed by the text 'the good guy won'. This is the saddest thing I've read in this thread.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 10:25 |
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The Call of Duty ad, where the guy is just smashing through things and flying through the air is the epitome of what I'm talking about. It's so far removed from real physics, real thought patterns, and real survivability that I can't get into it. In order to feel any sense of thrill, a character has to be in danger. How is he in danger when he can smash through a 8th story opaque wall, and just happen to land on a truck? How can I sense danger when I know that none of the 8 million bullets flying around are going to hit the guy?
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 11:00 |
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10 Beers posted:On a whim this weekend, my girlfriend and I decided to watch the new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Mistakes were made. You could just put the whole movie in this thread. TMNT was really odd watch for me because it had a lot of great scenes and ideas, and the Turtles themselves were as funny and charming as they should be. But overall I did not like the movie. It just didn't grab me and I felt really detached despite it earning a chuckle from me every so often. My only theory as to why is my nostalgia for the old live action films, and maybe I just couldn't relate to the poorly animated monstrosities they decided to use instead of physical costumes. I mean, the CGI was really really bad to the point that the whole movie looked like Roger Rabbit, with cartoons interacting with live people. I'm normally just fine with CG and I don't particularly have a strong opinion on the CGI/practical effects debate but in this case I think the advancements in practical effects could have made for great physical costumes for the Turtles and I can't help but wonder if they had gone that route instead if I would have liked the movie more.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 11:04 |
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EvilGenius posted:The Call of Duty ad, where the guy is just smashing through things and flying through the air is the epitome of what I'm talking about. It's so far removed from real physics, real thought patterns, and real survivability that I can't get into it. In order to feel any sense of thrill, a character has to be in danger. How is he in danger when he can smash through a 8th story opaque wall, and just happen to land on a truck? How can I sense danger when I know that none of the 8 million bullets flying around are going to hit the guy? You can ordinarilly sense danger? No wonder you find action scenes boring if you are spider-man!
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 11:11 |
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Mans posted:I never really understood why Charles Nichols helped the protagonist so much in the Fugitive. He went out of his way to lie to the police and give cash to the person who would eventually trace the murder of his wife back to himç Probably because he didn't expect Richard to actually find out the truth. Him running around evading cops just makes him look more guilty.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 13:16 |
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muscles like this? posted:Probably because he didn't expect Richard to actually find out the truth. Him running around evading cops just makes him look more guilty. That's what I thought. He was helping him so that Richard wouldn't suspect him, right?
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 13:36 |
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I think the characters are supposed to be fairly good friends but it is kind of hard to tell, since the movie starts with the arrest. So you don't get a good look at his life before.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 13:55 |
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Ahhhh Hobbit 3. Where to begin? "Battle ready" orcs getting torn apart by plucky, starving rivertown children! While wearing full plate armour no less. Random gigantic-scale monsters dying, with no real rhyme or reason! Blatent disregard for SIXTY loving ONE years of time passing between the movies! Comic relief characters out of nowhere.. Let's turn Beorn into a 3 second nudge-nudge-wink-wink we totally included everyone cameo. The entire movie couldn't decide if it was slapstick comedy, deeply emotional tragidrama ("WHY DOES IT HURT NOT-DADDY? WHYYYYYY?"), or computer game. The worst though, the absolute worst, was the overuse of sweep-right with a zoom-out and RISE! now cut to closeup of somebody's face. When it becomes apparent, it's the most frustratingly petty annoying thing. gently caress that movie. gently caress that trilogy actually.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 13:57 |
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The only way I can reconcile The Hobbit is that it's a children's movie based off of a children's book.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 14:35 |
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EvilGenius posted:The Call of Duty ad, where the guy is just smashing through things and flying through the air is the epitome of what I'm talking about. It's so far removed from real physics, real thought patterns, and real survivability that I can't get into it. In order to feel any sense of thrill, a character has to be in danger. How is he in danger when he can smash through a 8th story opaque wall, and just happen to land on a truck? How can I sense danger when I know that none of the 8 million bullets flying around are going to hit the guy? I totally get it and feel the same way, I think. I mean I too find many actionsequenses extremely boring or infuriating. That doesn't mean that I don't like car chases and fights scenes, it just means that I like it done the right way. Action done for actions sake or the cool factor is loving poo poo. Hulebr00670065006e has a new favorite as of 14:58 on Dec 22, 2014 |
# ? Dec 22, 2014 14:55 |
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It's a sad day when I can't even be bothered watching the Hobbit 3: The Hobbiting. First one was fun, but second was a bit of a slog with so many pointless battle scenes it's insulting.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 15:11 |
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mng posted:It's a sad day when I can't even be bothered watching the Hobbit 3: The Hobbiting. First one was fun, but second was a bit of a slog with so many pointless battle scenes it's insulting.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 15:23 |
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See, I loved the LOTR movies and (other than a few of the new scenes) love the extended editions even more, but I burned the hell out on The Hobbit roughly halfway through the first overly long bloated crapsack of a movie. That said, I do have an irrationally irritating moment for the LOTR trilogy itself; Gimli is always comic relief, I don't think he gets to do a single badass or heroic thing the whole drat time. Even Merry and Pippin, who get a ton of comedic moments, get to shine occasionally. Not Gimli though: it's all dwarf jokes all the time with him. Dwarves are my least favorite fantasy race too and back in my D&D playing days no doubt made plenty of dumb jokes at their expense, and yet I found myself going "drat Jackson, give the dude a break why don'tcha?"
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 15:41 |
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a kitten posted:See, I loved the LOTR movies and (other than a few of the new scenes) love the extended editions even more, but I burned the hell out on The Hobbit roughly halfway through the first overly long bloated crapsack of a movie. I feel exactly the same, love the movies. There are also plenty of big battles from the books to pick from, so it hardly felt like they were dragging on or were pointless. I don't give a poo poo about Tom Bombadil not being in the movies, but I'm a bit sad that the ending with the battle in The Shire and Saruman wandering around like a broken old
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 15:58 |
a kitten posted:See, I loved the LOTR movies and (other than a few of the new scenes) love the extended editions even more, but I burned the hell out on The Hobbit roughly halfway through the first overly long bloated crapsack of a movie. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgmjyNc-H1I
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:02 |
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I was getting irrationally irritated about The Hobbit, then I remembered that it was originally written by a guy who needed an editor badly, and There and Back Again was fictionally written by a lying, thieving, has-a-flair-for-the-dramatic Hobbit, Bilbo. The more you look at all those elaborate battle scenes, the more they come across as Bilbo exaggerating details to make the story far more impressive.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:07 |
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Eh! Frank posted:I thought he was kinda badass during the cave-troll scene. "Let them come. There is one dwarf yet in Moria who still draws breath. " Maybe not a shining moment, but he's not really comedic relief at this point. Hey you're right! Somehow I forgot that line. Still sticking with my complaint overall though.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:14 |
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Just rewatched Speed for the first time in a long time. Yeah its a tongue in cheek action flick with just 'one.more.action.sequence' but seriously, the bus jump was obviously done with a stunt vehicle and camera tricks but looked good enough, the bus eventually blowing up as it hits a plane is one of the biggest on screen explosions ive seen on the big screen... Its then they go 'lets jam another impossible situation in there' with the subway bit and it so horribly obvious its a scale model. Like so blatently obvious they ran out of SFX budget for it and I think it would have ended better without some of the wasted effort on the train coming off the rails shots.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:21 |
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So, I watched Snowpiercer lately, and despite a 95% positive rating and an interesting premise, by the end you realize the film is actually a very blatant rip-off of The Matrix: Reloaded. Let me count the ways... - a post-apocalyptic world that has been rendered cold and lifeless - A single warm bastion for humanity, preserved by machines - Ham-fisted Classism commentary - Hero battles through layers of bad guys to reach the mysterious source of all the oppression. Upon arrival, we see a quiet, simple room that is in stark contrast to what we've seen previously and what we were expecting. Violence is still happening outside, but inside this room, there is time for some contrasting quiet conversation. - The Matrix had the Architect, Snowpiercer had the Engineer, both quiet, calm, older, logical characters full of exposition at the end of their film - Protagonist has to decide between saving humanity and helping a single person. That single person represents all humanity is fighting for. - Both films have an Asian "keymaster" who can open all the doors and dies right after opening the final door - Unexplained clairvoyant female character (at least the Matrix attempted to explain/develop it. It was a very, very shallow, lazy device in SP) - Kung-fu fighting - Tastee Wheat/Protein bar (oh, yeah, as someone who is an admitted baby-eating cannibal, the protagonist in Snowpiercer got WAY too pissed about eating bug bars) - There's even a nod-wink moment when the Engineer and Captain America are eating where they acknowledge how similar it is to M:R (that doesn't make it a good idea) - Humans' bodies being used to maintain machinery - A long, convoluted plot by a puppet-master to deliver the main character to the ending that would have gone wrong a hundred times over if not for sheer luck - The culling of humans down to a select few time after time only to allow them to rebuild, to maintain balance. Hero can't believe it! How could this be!? And yet, suddenly, it all makes sense! - You, Hero, must decide the fate of humanity after a jaw-dropping reveal! What decision could you possibly make? The audience will never guess! - Raves - Steampunk - Crappy CGI - Unkillable antagonist in a suit - Oblivious Matrix/First-class denizens I enjoyed the first 30 minutes or so, but drat, did it believe itself to be 10x more clever than it actually was. I don't think there was one subtle/insightful moment in the film. Eclipse12 has a new favorite as of 16:43 on Dec 22, 2014 |
# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:36 |
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dpack_1 posted:Just rewatched Speed for the first time in a long time. Yeah its a tongue in cheek action flick with just 'one.more.action.sequence' but seriously, the bus jump was obviously done with a stunt vehicle and camera tricks but looked good enough, the bus eventually blowing up as it hits a plane is one of the biggest on screen explosions ive seen on the big screen... The subway stuff at the end of Speed is stupid because you just got done with a movie long action scene and then they just tack that extra one right on the end. I don't think anyone would have objected if they had ended it a different way.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 16:47 |
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muscles like this? posted:The subway stuff at the end of Speed is stupid because you just got done with a movie long action scene and then they just tack that extra one right on the end. I don't think anyone would have objected if they had ended it a different way.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 17:24 |
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EvilGenius posted:The Call of Duty ad, where the guy is just smashing through things and flying through the air is the epitome of what I'm talking about. It's so far removed from real physics, real thought patterns, and real survivability that I can't get into it. In order to feel any sense of thrill, a character has to be in danger. How is he in danger when he can smash through a 8th story opaque wall, and just happen to land on a truck? How can I sense danger when I know that none of the 8 million bullets flying around are going to hit the guy? I think you just hate bad action sequences. Watch The Raid, that movie is basically just an hour and a half action scene and it's absolutely gripping because of how well done it is.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 17:49 |
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Eclipse12 posted:So, I watched Snowpiercer lately, and despite a 95% positive rating and an interesting premise, by the end you realize the film is actually a very blatant rip-off of The Matrix: Reloaded. Let me count the ways... I hope to gently caress you aren't saying TMR was better than snowpiercer. TMR was agonizing from the first moment to the last. At least snowpiercer was shot well.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 17:52 |
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Ignite Memories posted:I hope to gently caress you aren't saying TMR was better than snowpiercer. TMR was agonizing from the first moment to the last. At least snowpiercer was shot well. I like how every shot of the train from the outside doesn't show the one car that's three times the size of the others to fit that ludicrous CGI aquarium. I also love that the suggestion that the train has enough scavenger population that they can be harvested to support several cars worth of people's food needs. Also I dig that ending where they die like five minutes after the screen fades because either they freeze, starve, or a polar bear attacks them. Yay, humanity still has hope! Actually I kid, I love heavily stylized movies and that film was about as heavy as they come.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 17:59 |
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Ignite Memories posted:I hope to gently caress you aren't saying TMR was better than snowpiercer. TMR was agonizing from the first moment to the last. At least snowpiercer was shot well. theironjef posted:I like how every shot of the train from the outside doesn't show the one car that's three times the size of the others to fit that ludicrous CGI aquarium. I also love that the suggestion that the train has enough scavenger population that they can be harvested to support several cars worth of people's food needs. Also I dig that ending where they die like five minutes after the screen fades because either they freeze, starve, or a polar bear attacks them. Yay, humanity still has hope! This guy knows what's up.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 18:06 |
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I also liked how every exterior shot looked like CG FMV from a PS1 game.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 18:09 |
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Eclipse12 posted:I also liked how every exterior shot looked like CG FMV from a PS1 game. Like you keep expecting Squall to come steal a few cars off the drat thing, yeah.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 18:19 |
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Pilchenstein posted:According to the writer's commentary, the film actually ends when the bus explodes and everything after that is just some tacked on poo poo because they hadn't explicitly shown Dennis Hopper being brutally murdered for his crimes and that just wasn't good enough for test audiences. But we got the incredible "But I'm taller" one-liner out of it, at least
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 19:16 |
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Thanks guys, I felt like checking out the IMDB trivia page for Speed and then I clicked on a 8 page discussion thread about how good a womans rear end looked in a 2 second elevator rescue scene.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 19:35 |
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I'd take the piss, but I watched Speed once when it came out and that's about all I remember from it. TBF I was like 14.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 19:39 |
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Counterpoint: the matrix reloaded I cannot believe you folks are defending the movie where lovely cgi playstation2 hugo weavings make a literal bowling pin noise when they hit each other. Seriously, go re watch the burly brawl and tell me the matrix reloaded is not the worst movie ever put to film. You guys clearly do not remember what bad cgi truly is. Ignite Memories has a new favorite as of 20:22 on Dec 22, 2014 |
# ? Dec 22, 2014 20:10 |
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Eh! Frank posted:I thought he was kinda badass during the cave-troll scene. "Let them come. There is one dwarf yet in Moria who still draws breath. " Maybe not a shining moment, but he's not really comedic relief at this point. He also got a couple of cool moments in Helm's Deep: when he jumps from the top of battlements right after they breach the wall, and then fighting back-to-back with Aragorn to buy time for the Rohan to repair the gate. Although that second one is kinda undercut by the "toss me!" bit right beforehand.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 20:20 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:56 |
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Ignite Memories posted:Counterpoint: the matrix reloaded No one is defending Reloaded. No one likes it. They're saying that Snowpiercer is ripping it off, yes. But you can rip things off from a piece of poo poo if you want, it's merely inadvisable, not impossible.
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# ? Dec 22, 2014 20:25 |