Sandman81's Replies


I highly doubt that for both of them. 1) Most actresses feel the other way about doing nudity early in their careers. They regret doing it and feel like they were exploited. 2) Kristen Bell did a whole lot of sexual content in her career, especially Forgetting Sarah Marshall and House of Lies. She had no problem showing 95% of her body, and she looked good doing it. I really don't think she sits around regretting not showing the world the other 5%. 3) Both of them could still do it if they really wanted too. Even while approaching 50, if they dedicated themselves to getting into good shape, they could do a nude scene, and most of their fans would still LOVE it. They didn't know for certain that the Predator had a "code of honor". At that point it was a theory by Dutch. And it did just target and kill Poncho, who was seriously wounded. So probably in an act of panic and desperation she went for the weapon. Also the Predator may not have seen her grab the gun. After it fired, it hid behind the tree to recharge. All true. However, T-1000 was in a tough spot at that moment. John was aware now that a Terminator was after him, and the T-101 had made contact with him. It had no idea where John was, or where he was going. All he had was the foster parents address and Sarah's location at the psych ward. So he tried the foster parents house first, having already been there and being familiar with it and them, hoping that John would come back for some reason, perhaps to grab some things before going on the run. It was probably a long shot John would come back, but it was best it had at that point. Maybe John would flee from the T-101, thinking it might want to kill him as well. Or the T-1000 was hoping that the more primitive Terminator would be stupid enough to take him back to the house, thinking it could protect John there. As previously stated, we don't know how long the T-1000 was Janelle. It could have been for only 10 minutes. When Todd walked into the kitchen that may have been the first time it had seen him since returning. Maybe Todd was asleep on the couch. A common trait among Terminators is that they don't kill people unless it's for 1 of 3 reasons: 1) It's their mission. 2) You're interfering with their ability to complete their mission. 3) You get caught in the crossfire. The T-100 was trying to sweet talk John into coming back to the house. When Todd walked into the kitchen and started yelling at the dog, he jeopardized its ability to do that. So now it's time for Todd to go. Well if John walked into the house and found Todd's body lying on the floor in bloody hep, then he would immediately flee, and the T100 would blow its chance to get him. Whereas if John walked in and Janette is in the kitchen making dinner and Todd is watching Tv, he would think everything was normal and walk further into the house and trap himself. Maybe the T1000 just found her first so he took her form. And we don't know how long it had been at the house. It maybe have been there for less than an hour. And this was just the first time it had seen Todd. He may have been asleep on the couch or doing something in the garage. And killing Todd would have made another mess it would need to clean up and another body he would need to hide before John got home, which he wasn't sure when that would happen. It decided to kill Todd then because he was affecting its plan of sweet-talking John into coming home. And it's a baby, not a teenager. And they know who the father is. NO!!!!! There are 3 guys. Danson's career had the highest peak, but Selleck has constantly had things going on for 40 years. Isn't racist since it was droids. Not sure what it is, or if they still enforce it, but not racist. 1) They distrusted all adults. 2) You might be overestimating the ages of the boys. Doubtful any would be in their 20's. None the less Hollywood does frequently cast young people to play parts that they are older than. Have you ever seen a high school movie? As far as Rufio being the leader, maybe his predecessor deemed him the most worthy. 3) That's just how they ate. 4) Hunting was probably seen as more of an adult activity. And maybe they didn't fish for fear of hooking a mermaid. 5) I've known some shockingly agile fat guys. This is a fantasy movie so maybe we can let that slide. Peter deemed him the worthiest to took over leading the Lost Boys. They did have the nice chat about Michael's marble's, which he had held on too. The scene where Henry narrates his dad beating him shows how even his narrations have a jaded view of the life. Instead of looking at it as a father being pissed and freaking out over his son ditching school to hang out with gangsters who would kill him at the drop of a hat, he thought his father was frustrated with his own life, and jealous that his son was hanging out with those guys. He was a fugitive now, so he needed his cash. He took care of the windshield because he did that. Most likely after, but definitely possible before. There's a lot of possibilities for how this could work. Of course, we are going with the assumption that Mr. Green was an undercover FBI agent in all 3 endings. 1) There was a Mr. Green who was gay and worked for the State Department. Mr. Boddy found out and started blackmailing him. When he received the letter, he freaked out and went to the FBI. Realizing that there were several people being blackmailed by this man, they sent an undercover agent in Mr. Greens stead, in order to get the evidence to bust this mysterious Mr. Boddy. Now you might ask why Mr. Boddy didn't realize that the man at the house was not Mr. Green. Perhaps he never actually saw Mr. Green. He had an informant who told him about Mr. Green, just like he did with the other five guest. And when the real Mr. Green went to the FBI, the informant was arrested, which is why he was the only informant not at the house. 2) Another theory to explain why there wasn't an informant for Mr. Green, was there wasn't one. They knew of a mysterious man named "Mr. Boddy" who was blackmailing high profile people in the DC area but could never get a victim to testify against him. So they set up one of their guys with a job at the State Department, and sent an unanimous tip to Mr. Boddy that he was gay. So Mr. Boddy sent a letter to Mr. Green telling him that he had evidence of his secret and he better pay to keep it quiet. Then when the invitation to the party came, they knew that was their chance. 3) Or maybe they figured out who the informant was first, and needed to find out who he was working for. So they sent their agent in undercover, he hit on the informant, and the informant told Mr. Boddy. Now they have a direct connection to Mr. Boddy, and can try to figure out who he is. The party was their opportunity. Obviously they didn't anticipate the murders, including who they thought was Mr. Boddy. And being gay in the 1950's was enough for some employers, including the government, to fire someone. No. Both his parents were normal sized and lived in New York City. He developed his "superhuman skills" from years and years of practice with the other elves. II was good. While it may not live up to the first, it's a very solid action/comedy movie in its own right. III was a mess. It was almost like they wanted to do a pg-13 version of the first one so that it would appeal to a larger audience. But then they did just enough to keep the R rating, so in the end we're left with a watered-down rehashing of the first movie, and it didn't make any money. An inground pool today would cost on average around $35,000, with $55,000 being on the high end. In 1989 that would be around $14,105, or up to $22,166. Given the way Clark thinks, I have a feeling he would be closer to the high end. My guess is that he was expecting that check to be in the near $20,000. As a man of science, you wouldn't rule out any possibility until you know for certain in won't work. Especially the two simplest ways: the car running on its own, or having horses pull it. If one horse could get to 25 mph, it could be possible for 4 horses to get to 100 mph. Then 6 horses could pull the DeLoren. It was a theory he had to try before ruling out. There is the element of "too soon". For major tragedies like this or 9/11, people need time to process what happened, get over the shock of it and grieve. Once you give people that time to get themselves together, then sports can become the much-needed distraction, like they were in 2001. The NFL was wrong to play those games so soon after the assassination. Everyone involved in those games regretted the decision to play. And to make matters worse was the story was still developing. Lee Harvey Oswald was shot less than an hour before kickoff, and people were trying to figure out what happened with that.