MartyDeniro's Replies


6 6.5 1. Led Zeppelin 2. Fleetwood Mac 3. Rolling Stones 4. Black Sabbath 1. Led Zeppelin 2. Queen 3. Black Sabbath 4. Guns And Roses 5. Rolling Stones 6. The Doors 7. Fleetwood Mac 8. Nirvana It's "favorite band" -- not best or most important. 1. Rolling Stones 2. Alice in Chains 3. The Doors 4. Steely Dan 5. Led Zeppelin 6. Pink Floyd 7. The Who 8. Queen https://moviechat.org/tt0391483/Take-Out 1. Deep Purple 2. Fleetwood Mac 3. Styx 4. Black Sabbath 5. Cream 6. Motley Crue 7. The Bee Gees 8. Guns N Roses 1. The Doors 2. Guns And Roses 3. AC/DC 4. U2 5. Radiohead 6. The Beatles 7. The Cure 8. Cream 9. Led Zeppelin 10. Bon Jovi 1. Def Leppard 2. Van Halen 3. ELO 4. Fleetwood Mac 5. Steely Dan 6. Toto 7. Pretenders 8. The Bee Gees 9. The Beach Boys 10. The Jimi Hendrix Experience 1. Nirvana 2. Boston 3. Metallica 4. Black Sabbath 5. Rolling Stones 6. Pink Floyd 7. Alice in Chains 8. Eagles 9. Motley Crue 10. Styx 11. The Temptations 12. Deep Purple https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nf0oXY4nDxE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78gslUjRV9k Streaming is simply giving the market what it wants. If the theatrical experience meant to others what it does to you, it would still be thriving -- but it isn't. People have had a mini big screen at home for a long time now, and that's enough for them. So streaming really isn't the cause, but rather it appeared to fill a desire for most -- convenience of not leaving home, and the ability for short attention spans to jump around with ease. Why are they drawing angels as Cub Scouts? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-5o2f9wzmw Yeah, I can see the parallel. The character development works and the plot is immediately compelling. Tàr is a much better film. Till is more about Danielle Deadwyler's performance. I think part of your reply is geared towards what others said rather than what I did. But to answer that side of things anyway: The major dramatic question here was what happened to those guys that night, not who killed Annie. The former gets saved for the finale, but the other might've been the climax of the penultimate episode. And I don't think anyone would bail out after finding out what happened to Annie, b/c they didn't care what really happened to the men. But beyond that, there's still too many beats. The idea of having all this back and forth centered with those two at a TSALAL camp out felt clumsily written. And so much of what was included had not been developed prior to a level where it would have the desired impact. If you have too many things, and play them too small along the way, there's no momentum heading into the end. You should feel like you're at the crest of the rollercoaster, about to zoom straight down into the climax. Instead, we have them hanging out for exposition, then conveniently separating or slipping away - like Danvers taking a nap alone just to shove in another dream sequence and to leave Navarro to do whatever alone. I don't think your primaries should be taking naps in a finale, but that's just me. Disagree. Way too many beats stuffed into a finale when you consider how slowly it all moved during the middle episodes. The penultimate episode should've contained some of what we saw in the last.