(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.
Snowpiercer (rented from Amazon!) was more and less upsetting than I had expected, based on comments here and elsewhere. Since I saw it in my living room, I think the violence was less intense than they would have been in a theater. But the rest of it...damn. Chris Evans has some serious acting chops.
(I will say, I was
relieved at the final reveal of what they did with the kids, because the movie had prepped me to expect something much much worse. I was certain the "steaks" in first class had come from steerage, especially when Chris Evans very obviously refused to take a bite. The fact that they were only forcing five year-olds to work inside an engine 24 hours a day until they died from starvation and/or exhaustion seemed pretty reasonable in comparison to what I was worried about.)