I really enjoyed this Bruce Banner vid: [link]
'Unleashed'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I'm not sure why a geologist couldn't get lost if they were in rocks, but I agree with LeN--that was the spaceship, wasn't it?
But, yeah--these were some resounding stupid people. Decision after decision was barely even a decision. And some of the obstacles were kind of random. When Shaw went into Inara's shuttle (that's totes what it looked like to me) in order to have the abortion, the gender discrimination of the machinery seemed really random. And, if it's designed for men (no foreshadowing there), how can you just talk it through an abortion? And why would it leave your womb? It thinks you're a guy, remember? And once all that was done, why don't you kill the fucking alien baby?
Oh, and why did that bit even happen? What orders was David under that told him to infect one of the crew members with black oil/purgatory monsters? Did it have to be him specifically? Because he was obviously going to sleep with someone right away and get her pregnant? What was supposed to happen as a result of that? How did it further Weyland's agenda? Or was it just random experimentation?
I enjoyed Prometheus very much, despite the persistent dumbassery of many of the characters.
The worst example, IMO was when Shaw and Vickers were running away from the crashing space ship. Why the hell didn't they just RUN TO THE SIDE instead of resolutely keeping within squishing range?
Zachary Levi in Thor 2: [link]
Huh.
ita,
so yeah, the differences between the male and female anatomy are such that if it were a stomach problem, I could see how, fuck it, just get the foreign body out, but since this foreign body was in an organ that men don't have, I just don't know how that's supposed to work. Not to mention that as fucking expensive as that self-surgical thing is, it fucking better work on men and women. WTF is the point then. in the theater, when the machine said that, I said out loud "fucking typical."
As far as David: I have seen interpretations of his actions that he was acting independently and decided to see if this material put in another human being might help his master. Makes no fucking sense of course because it follows no protocols regarding alien material. I mean WTF? I do not think he knew that the man would have kissy times with Dr. Shaw though. As drunk as he was, I'm surprised he could get it up.
As far as the alien baby: I think she thought she did kill it. She tried to cryo/freeze kill it, but apparently that didn't work. How Charlize Theron didn't notice that something was flapping around her medical chamber is beyond me.
Yeah, the equivalent of a handwashing protocol would prevent most of the problems in the movie. Or a dose of common sense. Jesus.
I think it was clear that David was more than the soulless shell Weyland described him as in his holo-letter. He's definitely shown signs of initiative, and doing things to satisfy himself, and not some explicit externally determined goal. What was happening to the archaeologist anyway? Was it making him a space jockey who was then able to father space jockey babies? Was he some middle ground? Would he be able to answer the questions Weyland was looking for? But David was kinda random anyway--why was he listening in on Elizabeth's dreams? I mean, as far as the story goes. Was that just to indicate to us that he's creepy and doesn't understand boundaries? In terms of the narrative I'm not entirely sure what it achieved.
Zachary Levi in Thor 2: [link]
Hmmmph. As long as they don't recast Volstaag or Sif, I guess I'm okay. Ray Stevenson was one of the only reasons I sat all the way through the latest Three Musketeers.
What was happening to the
So, I have no fucking idea. I heard from one podcast that it was splitting him open like the progenitor in the opening sequence of the film. Somehow equating that drop of whatever the fuck with the substance that disintegrated the pale man.
I simply thought that archaeologist dude was transforming like the geologist. The "weapon" was forming into a new thing that was going to burst from him sooner or later. Since it was earlier in its life cycle (compared to the geologist or the octopus in Dr. Shaw that passed through her lover first), it was taking a bit to become something new.
Oh, and David was random. Talk about an inconsistent characterization. Wild.
Oh, and technology that can "read" our dreams is pretty fucking awesome. Makes me think this kind of thing should have been incorporated better into the movie somehow. I mean, there should be equipment to communicate our thoughts from deep underground or something, yes?