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SeanC

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Posts posted by SeanC

  1. I saw this in a theatre seated in front of a row of tween girls similar in age to the protagonist, and while I generally despise people talking during movies, listening to their earnest chatter about the events onscreen was the absolute best way to watch this while outside the target audience. They were really into the film.

    Best use of "Son of a Preacher Man" on film since Tarantino.

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  2. 20 minutes ago, PurpleTentacle said:

    It's a bit weird that they changed Laika's name to Cosmo instead of just going with the original name. It's not like her descendants are going to get mad. I guess Cosmo is a character from the comics, but there it's a male dog, so...

    They changed the character's gender in reference to Laika.

  3. 11 minutes ago, sistermagpie said:

    YMMV, of course, but that's how coincidences work. You remember ones that were eerie and forget or wave off anything that wasn't, which is exactly what the survivors are going to do. Religious people do this all the time even in the regular world, often insisting there's no possible way it could have happened without a miracle when it totally could have. Or even without religion people often look at the steps that got them to where they were and think they seem too unlikely to be random.

    I will say that I think something like Lottie seeing something as specific as a deer with its antlers' shedding that then shows up exactly that way suggests ESP could objectively happen in this world even without being consistent. Other things are more murky. She felt Javi was alive and the baby would be a boy (50/50, but Javi was a stretch), but she also seemed to expect the baby to live. She herself as a character was able to decide none of it was real. But it seems like some people already thought Lottie had a second sight before they crashed without considering it supernatural.

    In the real world, sure, but in story terms, at a certain point from my perspective there's only so many coincidences you can pile up before it moves past being plausible.

    Some of the things Lottie has seen, like guessing the baby's sex, aren't all that meaningful to me, but others like the death of Laura Lee are in a different echelon. And then there's whatever's going on with Taissa, which at this point is way past any sort of actual real-world psychology.

    • Like 3
  4. 1 hour ago, sistermagpie said:

    I don't see how it would be contrived. There's nothing breaking the laws of physics here.

    Contrived in the sense that at this point I think there are way too many separate instances, some of them extremely on-point, to wave it off as coincidental.

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  5. 21 minutes ago, peachmangosteen said:

    Yea, I think the plot is just gonna end with everything was a coincidence/trauma made them do it it/such and such never happened it was a hallucination type stuff. Which I imagine will be very annoying, especially if they do the full seasons.

    Personally, I think that's unlikely. This is most likely building up to them going back to the wilderness to confront whatever is there.

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  6. 20 hours ago, AstridM said:

    I don’t think Lottie has been “right” about anything, really. It’s all just coincidence and superstitious nonsense, imo. 

    At this point, trying to say that there was never anything supernatural going on with Lottie and it was all coincidence would be extremely contrived.

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  7. With the strength and depth in the Korean women’s field, it’s been a long time coming for one of them to get on the World podium again, and ten years after Yuna’s final gold they managed it.

    Lee Hae-in was a standout as a junior who struggle a bit at the senior level, so I was very pleased at this for her.

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  8. 7 hours ago, Laurie4H said:

    Metaphors to everything bagels is not art.  It’s more of the writers saying “look how clever I am”.  

    The "Everything bagel" is a goofy pun, pretty emblematic of the film's approach, hardly what I'd call pretentious.

    • Like 10
  9. Quote

    From the producers of Neighbors and the co-screenwriter of Crazy Rich Asians, JOY RIDE stars Ashley Park, Sherry Cola, Oscar® nominee Stephanie Hsu, and Sabrina Wu. The hilarious and unapologetically explicit story of identity and self-discovery centers on four unlikely friends who embark on a once-in-a-lifetime international adventure. When Audrey’s (Ashley Park) business trip to Asia goes sideways, she enlists the aid of Lolo (Sherry Cola), her irreverent, childhood best friend who also happens to be a hot mess; Kat (Stephanie Hsu), her college friend turned Chinese soap star; and Deadeye (Sabrina Wu), Lolo’s eccentric cousin. Their no-holds-barred, epic experience becomes a journey of bonding, friendship, belonging, and wild debauchery that reveals the universal truth of what it means to know and love who you are. 

    This just debuted at SXSW, and the reception has been fairly positive. Big screen studio comedy is dicey as a commercial proposition these days, so hope for the best. I especially hope for good things for Lim in her directorial debut, after the pay controversy that saw her leave the Crazy Rich Asians sequel.

    • Like 2
  10. On 3/8/2023 at 11:32 PM, Galileo908 said:

    How much of this episode was written by ChatGPT, aside from the end? I bet the song was.

    That song is "Every Letter" from the 2021 musical drama Cyrano; the entire sequence is a direct parody of the equivalent scene in the movie.

    • Like 1
  11. On 2/25/2023 at 2:34 AM, kiddo82 said:

    ETA:  I also think the speech that Evelyn gives to Joy about all the infinite universes and the one Evelyn chooses to be in is the one with Joy would have been more powerful had she delivered it to Waymond.  Throughout the movie, we never see Evelyn resent Joy and Joy is the one thing that Evelyn continually tries to protect.  So other than telling Joy something that maybe she needed to hear, it feels like the wrong closure to that arc.  Evelyn had some things to learn about her relationship with her daughter, but life without her wasn't one of them.  On the other hand, it's Waymond, their marriage, and their business that Evelyn takes for granted.  And it's Waymond and his kind hearted nature that Evelyn has to learn to appreciate.  So it seems more fitting that that speech should be reserved for him.

    While Evelyn does try to protect Joy, their relationship at the start of the movie is in a bad place and her unaccepting attitude toward Joy (which is translated into metaphor in the Alpha Universe where Alpha-Evelyn literally breaks Alpha-Joy's brain to create Jobu) is what creates the whole threat. Telling Joy that she wants to be with her exactly as she is is emotional payoff.

    Unrelatedly, quite a dominating performance by the film at the SAG Awards. Such a great moment for James Hong, who spent so many years toiling in an industry that was never going to give him a fair shake.

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  12. The Pact were really generically brutal adversaries in the first season, so these developments give them a lot more thematic heft (basically they're Russia in the middle of their civil war).

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  13. 2 hours ago, specialj67 said:

    Man, watching that final group in the dance event—you’d think it was the world championships! Makes me even more excited for the actual world championships next month.

    Though ironically, half the teams in the final group will not be at the World Championships.

    • Like 1
  14. A really interesting film. Deliberately excessive to the point that it has obviously turned off some people, but there are a few sequences here that rate among the best things Chazelle has ever done -- the first attempt at filming a scene with recorded sound being my favourite.

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  15. Nobel Prize-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro fulfills a longstanding desire to remake Akira Kurosawa's 1952 classic Ikiru, transferring the setting to England in the same timeframe, with Bill Nighy inheriting Takashi Shimura's lead role as a jaded civil servant jolted out of his staid existence by a cancer diagnosis.

    The transferred social context is an obvious fit for Ishiguro, given there are some similarities to The Remains of the Day. Nighy, conversely, is playing a bit against the type audiences have come to expect from him, but he's also excellent. I was also really impressed by Aimee Lou Wood, in the role of his sympathetic subordinate. Tom Burke, from The Souvenir, also makes an impression.

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  16. From the Euros RD, I do love that the Taschlers' RD is choreographed with basically no regard for them being siblings. Shakira + Enrique Iglesias.

    Britschgi, the Swiss champion, having the performance of his life and getting the bronze medal in men's was great.

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