Off topic- I have a good friend who's daughter committed suicide and she is petitioning for the movie's name to be changed as she finds it offensive and hurtful.
Does she also get offended if someone has a custom car with suicide doors? Or does she call Sportsnet to complain if the commentators mention a hockey player making a suicide pass?
As someone who has also lost a family member to suicide, she is being asinine
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Off topic- I have a good friend who's daughter committed suicide and she is petitioning for the movie's name to be changed as she finds it offensive and hurtful.
I justs lost a friend to Suicide in the last couple months, and this might be one of the most ridiculous things I have read.
Maybe your friend should channel her energy into a suicide prevention program or education outreach, rather then petition a hollywood movie that has nothing to do with the issue she is having?
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Off topic- I have a good friend who's daughter committed suicide and she is petitioning for the movie's name to be changed as she finds it offensive and hurtful.
I applaud your friend. It's about time people started standing up to the big corporations for absolutely no reason and as someone of Italian descent I think I'm going to petition Burger King to change the name of their signature sandwich.
I'm not sure if it's just me but that trailer just doesn't seem exciting at all. The new FF one looks like a high school production with an unlimited budget. Just bad.
__________________
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That looks amazing!
The fact that is has so many great shots of the Alberta backdrop doesn't hurt either. Cinematography seems fantastic from the trailer.
Read this if you want to feel like less of a man. Story of Hugh Glass (Leo's character).
Spoiler!
Near the forks of the Grand River in present-day Perkins County, in August 1823, while scouting ahead of his trading partners for game for the expedition's larder, Glass surprised a grizzly bear mother with her two cubs. Before he could fire his rifle, the bear charged, picked him up, and threw him to the ground. The bear threw his flesh to its cubs. Glass got up, grappled for his knife, and fought back, stabbing the animal repeatedly as the grizzly raked him time and again with her claws.
Glass managed to kill the bear with help from his trapping partners, Fitzgerald and Bridger, but was left badly mauled and unconscious. Henry (who was also with them) became convinced the man would not survive his injuries.
Henry asked for two volunteers to stay with Glass until he died, and then bury him. Bridger (then 19 years old) and Fitzgerald (then 23 years old) stepped forward, and as the rest of the party moved on, began digging his grave.[2] Later claiming that they were interrupted in the task by an attack by "Arikaree"[citation needed] Indians, the pair grabbed Glass's rifle, knife, and other equipment, and took flight. Bridger and Fitzgerald incorrectly reported to Henry that Glass had died.
Despite his injuries, Glass regained consciousness. He did so only to find himself abandoned, without weapons or equipment, suffering from a broken leg, the cuts on his back exposing bare ribs, and all his wounds festering. Glass lay mutilated and alone, more than 200 miles (320 km) from the nearest American settlement at Fort Kiowa on the Missouri.
In one of the more remarkable treks known to history, Glass set his own leg, wrapped himself in the bear hide his companions had placed over him as a shroud, and began crawling. To prevent gangrene, Glass laid his wounded back on a rotting log and let the maggots eat the dead flesh.
Deciding that following the Grand River would be too dangerous because of hostile Indians, Glass crawled overland south toward the Cheyenne River using Thunder Butte, a prominent landmark visible for miles, as a navigational tool. It would take him six weeks to reach the Cheyenne River. Glass survived mostly on wild berries and roots. On one occasion he was able to drive two wolves from a downed bison calf, and feast on the meat. Glass was aided by friendly natives who sewed a bear hide to his back to cover the exposed wounds as well as providing him with food and a couple of weapons to defend himself. He made his way to the Cheyenne River, fashioned a crude raft and floated down the river, eventually reaching the safety of Fort Kiowa.
After a long recuperation, Glass set out to track down and avenge himself against Bridger and Fitzgerald. When he found Bridger, on the Yellowstone near the mouth of the Bighorn River, Glass spared him, purportedly because of Bridger's youth. When he found Fitzgerald, he discovered that Fitzgerald had joined the United States Army, Glass purportedly restrained himself because the consequence of killing a U.S. soldier was death. However, he did recover his lost rifle.
Glass, along with four others, was dispatched by Ashley to find a new trapping route, by going up the Powder River, then across and down the Platte to the bluffs. The party set off in a bullboat. Near the junction with the Laramie River, they discovered some 38 Indian lodges, with several Indians on the shore. The Indians appeared to be friendly, and the trappers initially believed them to be Pawnees. After going ashore and dining with the Indians, Glass discovered that the Indians actually belonged to the Arikara nation, who, after several past encounters, were anything but friendly with the whites. The party quickly got in the bull boat and paddled for the far shore. The Indians promptly swam in after them and both reached the shore around the same time. Two men, Marsh and Dutton, escaped and reunited later, but the other two, More and Chapman, were quickly overtaken and killed. Glass was lucky enough to find a group of rocks to hide behind, and was not discovered by the Arikaras. Glass also found his knife and flint in his shot pouch after the ordeal. He fell in with a party of Sioux and traveled with them back to Fort Kiowa.
Last edited by nixon45; 07-17-2015 at 01:00 PM.
Reason: formatting
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__________________ "In brightest day, in blackest night / No evil shall escape my sight / Let those who worship evil's might / Beware my power, Green Lantern's light!"
Problem is it peaked with Casino Royale. Bond always drinks, gambles, has women and fights bad guys.
In Casino Royale he discovers his favorite drink, plays the most popular form of poker and wins one of the biggest tournaments in history, meets his soul mate and fights a villain that is both menacing and flawed. When all the classic Bond tropes were done to perfection in one movie it will be impossible to top.
Casino Royale was excellent, the rest were crap. I do not get the love for Skyfall, I thought that movie was terrible. Quantum of Solace? Wow, horrible.
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Cinematography, a very important element to film making, no doubt.
So are things like plot, coherence, tone, dialogue, characters, dramatic tension. Things that Skyfall is woefully lacking.
The biggest problem with Skyfall is that it's just dumb or it thinks that the audience watching it is dumb. The plot is held together by the hope that the audience simply wont think about how stupid all of things that happen in the movie are.
So Christoph Waltz is Blofeld, right? It seems they are doing the same thing Star Trek Into Darkness with Khan -- where everyone knows it's him but for some reason the marketing team won't admit it.