Very cool, tommyrot! Both those books sounded way cool and up my alley, but I've got
so much else to read
that to add more right now would just increase my stress. Will keep them in mind for the future, though.
(Yes, I did not download a book for free because it would stress me out to have it sitting there unread on my Kindle. Hi, I'm me.)
(Yes, I did not download a book for free because it would stress me out to have it sitting there unread on my Kindle. Hi, I'm me.)
See, what I do is download a free book anyway. And then get stressed by it sitting unread on my Kindle app.
Wait, maybe yours is better.
Typo,
echo sentiments expressed above: don't watch Snowpiercer yet. It isn't "12 Years a Slave", but the movie is not "The Blues Brothers" either.
Thanks to you and Plei both. I'll hold off on it.
echo sentiments expressed above: don't watch Snowpiercer yet. It isn't "12 Years a Slave", but the movie is not "The Blues Brothers" either.
Oh yeah. And I can't be how sure I buy into there being
any remote kind of happy ending. Polar bears not being the most beneficent of bears among other things.
I took the polar bear to mean that there was life out there.
I like that Frank went to the
dark
place though.
After reading all the whitefont, I really want to see Snowpiercer, even though it'll probably disturb me. I'll get it on DVD so I can watch it in the safety of my den and turn it off if I need to.
Oh, wait, it's already available on Amazon Instant. Now I have to decide.
zenkitty,
it is on itunes now I heard also.
I like that Frank went
Yeah, that's kind of how I roll with movies like this. But that's what I enjoy at the movies.
The Ebert doc was both more depressing and more uplifting, it that makes any sense. I think he would have loved Snowpiercer though. It's one of many movies I regret I'll never read his review of.