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RedVIII (49)


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A unique moment in slasher history Need help finding a 2008-10 dance/rock song SOLVED: WWII UFO adventure comedy Meta plot hole This specific poster Jurassic Park: Chaos Effect The mysterious figure *spoiler* Trying to find name of straight-to-DVD horror/action movie 1 and 2 Combined? Freddy phasing through the jail bars View all posts >


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I rewatched the JW movies recently as well and I totally agree. This is exactly it, thank you! *MAJOR SPOILERS* He had to have shot both Terry and himself. Also what exactly was David doing at truck stops? If he's a homosexual why was he so shocked and repulsed at having had a threesome with Terry, he also seems to show no interest in Terry at all from what I remember so it just seems a little odd with the discrepancy. What's his relationship with Rigo? Outside of Terry's comment there didn't seem to be anything backing up David's repressed homosexuality other than motivation for him snapping at the end and killing Rigo. The aesthetic is nice-looking enough; flowers, blue sky, white cloth. But her facial expression says something is way off. That it's a close up is like saying; "We're not telling you what's going on". I agree, this is why I don't get the sequel-haters who think a conceptual "Jurassic Park 2" could have been "much better". None of the sequels are trash if we are to accept JP as being a franchise. If this person steadfastly believes JP should have NO sequels period, then fair enough. Right in between good times making weak men and hard times making strong men. We could assume the tornado is a phenomenon like the sucking we see coming from the children's closet I suppose. That seems like such a huge force we only ever see the likes of again when the house implodes. When Robbie and Steven fall off the tree, only then does the tree uproot from the tornado. When it grabs Robbie's leg with it's root that's the only point of action the tree takes; if the poltergeist is controlling the tornado why does it only suck up the tree, and why does the tree grab his leg like it's a last ditch effort to get him while getting sucked away into the tornado? If the tornado is the same sucking phenomenon seen in the children's closet, just outside in the open air why didn't it suck up any/all of the family outside, instead choosing to only uproot an entire tree (the tree struggled to get Robbie as it got hurled away; that's fighting against the tornado)? To me from most to least likely it's: 1. God's tornado. 2. Just a random tornado. 3. Poltergeist's tornado. My interpretation is the poltergeist is only associated with the tree, the tornado is Spielberg throwing in a "subtle" nod to God in his spirit-and-afterlife movie (he supposedly believes in a god). The tornado interrupts the poltergeist from using the tree. The tornado barely touches down just enough to only remove the tree. It's a miracle, an act of God. Marion had a lot on her mind between her wedding date closing in and her Father just passing, she was making a panicked and overly emotional gesture to escape the current situation of her life with someone she felt temptation with (Bill). As for Bill and the plot this moment is another push for Bill to explore/consider infidelity. On a more dream logic note, Marion somewhat resembles Alice as if they are doppelgangers (Marion's fiancé also passes for Bill's double, just with glasses). Parallel this scene with Bill and Alice's previous scene together; Alice reveals her passing desire for infidelity and a sort of "death" occurs in their relationship as result, making Bill feel like he doesn't know Alice. Back to the scene with Marion we have a literal death involved with her father and Bill tells the Alice-double (paraphrased) "We hardly know each other. I don't think we've had a conversation about anything other than your Father." who has now passed. View all replies >