Really nothing could stop Grant or the others from appearing in another film. Frankly, Id love for Grant and Melcom to show back up. Make their appearance count but that could be awesome. Maybe even Lora Dern could come back too.
Really nothing could stop Grant or the others from appearing in another film. Frankly, Id love for Grant and Melcom to show back up. Make their appearance count but that could be awesome. Maybe even Lora Dern could come back too.
I really wish that Pete Postlethwaite had more of a coda and send off than retiring from the "company of death." His character was probably the most interesting in LW in terms of arc, and development.
On the other hand, it's a safe bet Horny Junior and High Functioning Autism will never be seen again.![]()
I really wish that Pete Postlethwaite had more of a coda and send off than retiring from the "company of death." His character was probably the most interesting in LW in terms of arc, and development.
Roland was the best and only character I cared about in TLW. It would have been cool he had been the lead and we had seen the story entirely from his POV as a hunter, it would have made TLW far better.
Really nothing could stop Grant or the others from appearing in another film. Frankly, Id love for Grant and Melcom to show back up. Make their appearance count but that could be awesome. Maybe even Lora Dern could come back too.
I love the fact that people totally accept the dino's, but complain about things like gyroballs........
It's often said about sci-fi that the trick is to only get the audience to accept one impossible thing. You can develop lots of secondary impossible things off of that one original thing but it all has to be connected. In a sci-fi context, I accept the movie's initial premise that dinosaurs could be brought back from extinction through cloning. I accept that they would be the central attraction of a multi-million-dollar amusement park. And while I accept the gyroballs on a technological level, I don't accept the idea that the park would allow the guests to drive them amidst large dinosaurs unsupervised. I'm fine with unrealistic technology but I still expect a higher level of realistic human behavior.
2. Compare to Laura Dern's character in 93, B.D. Howard's character in JP4 set feminism back about 4 decades.
I'm really getting sick of the feminism bullshit. You can only be a feminist if you are a tomboy like Laura Dern's character? You can't wear heels and be a feminist?
My biggest problem with the gyroball is that it ruins what made the T-Rex attack in the original movie so terrifying. People are familiar with normal vehicles, like the SUVs from the first film. People feel safe in a normal vehicle, both due to the protective frame and the fact that you can move away from danger. This is why so many horror films have characters running to their vehicles only to find out they aren't exactly safe there. So the scene in JP was terrifying not only because the characters were in a place people normally feel safe in, but because the vehicles and the rain blocked the view of the T-Rex.
The gyroball felt unsafe from the beginning. It was like an amusement park ride designed to cause thrill - which makes sense in a theme park, but completely ruins any suspense when characters are attacked in it. People know how much damage an SUV can take, so when the T-Rex nearly crushes it, it shows how dangerous the T-Rex is. People had no ideal how much damage the gyroball can take, so when the I-Rex tears into it, people think "well, the thing was unsafe to begin with".
There was plenty of stupid characters and most of them where maleHow so? Don't get me wrong, I'm no fan of Howard's character in the film. However, it isn't as if she were a completely useless damsel who constantly needed saving. She was incredibly stupid, but that had nothing to do with her being a woman.
That scene struck me as a "play it for laughs" which fell kind of flat, in a character way.I'm really getting sick of the feminism bullshit. You can only be a feminist if you are a tomboy like Laura Dern's character? You can't wear heels and be a feminist?
Nope. You have missed the point completely. The problem isn't that she isn't a tomboy, it's the stereotypical, woman who is career oriented is an ice-cold bitch that no one likes. It comes across as a woman can be likable or career focused, but she can't be both. It reinforces the trope that almost all woman in positions of power have to deal with, balancing being assertive with coming off as a bitch. Then her character only becomes likable when she embraces her more motherly instincts.
Plus there was that god awful scene when she tells the kids that she's not leaving their side ever again, and they're like, "no, want to be with him!" Even though at that point they'd literally seen Pratt's character do nothing at all, but they'd witness her totally be a badass using the but of a gun to save Pratt's character.
I think you are all over reading every little thing. The whole heel thing was the actress's idea. that it fit the over achieving character. I think in the next one she will be less stick up her ass (She wasn't really bitchy, just high strung), but then of course everyone will go 'They just changed her because we complained'.
The adult characters in JW weren't as good as in JP, yet the children were 100 times better.
I think you are all over reading every little thing. The whole heel thing was the actress's idea. that it fit the over achieving character. I think in the next one she will be less stick up her ass (She wasn't really bitchy, just high strung), but then of course everyone will go 'They just changed her because we complained'.
The adult characters in JW weren't as good as in JP, yet the children were 100 times better.
Yeah, BDH seemed pretty satisfied in the heel thing in that it's meaning was that she could be a bad-ass but not stop "being a woman." And she wasn't strictly bitchy or anything she was just, you know, on the clock and not necessarily in a job where she can just take some PTO at the drop of a hat.
Though the "your biological clock is ticking!" sub-plot was a little heavy-handed. I know women are on more of a "timer" to have children than men are (since women have an end to their reproductive life) but you'd never see a male character in a movie pressured by family or friends to settle down, focus less on his career, and have children.
but you'd never see a male character in a movie pressured by family or friends to settle down, focus less on his career, and have children.
Though the "your biological clock is ticking!" sub-plot was a little heavy-handed. I know women are on more of a "timer" to have children than men are (since women have an end to their reproductive life) but you'd never see a male character in a movie pressured by family or friends to settle down, focus less on his career, and have children.
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