Anyone find that Dustin in his battle gear looked like an ewok?

Anyone find that Dustin in his battle gear looked like an ewok?
Yup; like I said: Jabba's Palace!Can't see Max spending season 5 in a coma.
It's the mid-80's. No mobile phones, and any carphone the General might have had would have been in the vehicles. Same for any long range radio gear; No point taking a signalman with a backpack transceiver down into a bunker after all (even if the antenna would fit through the door, which it wouldn't, so moot point.)Eleven smashed the helicopter straight onto their jeeps (they only brought 3 or 4 iirc) so they were probably stranded in the desert for a while. Although I still can't explain why the general wouldn't have been on the radio sending other troops out to look for a Surfer Boy Pizza van with a bunch of kids in it the second he realized what happened. It's a bit of a stretch to think they made it 2000 miles in a vehicle that conspicuous without being rediscovered again.
Yup; like I said: Jabba's Palace!
It's the mid-80's. No mobile phones, and any carphone the General might have had would have been in the vehicles. Same for any long range radio gear; No point taking a signalman with a backpack transceiver down into a bunker after all (even if the antenna would fit through the door, which it wouldn't, so moot point.)
Plus they cut the hardline before the assault, so no getting the word out that way in a hurry either.
In those old analogue exchanges, it really would have been faster an easier to cut the main line that to try and pick out the one specific extension he was dialling from. It's not like he was calling from a private office or anything; It was one of presumably several phones in the lab area.I'm pretty sure the phone cut was part of Brenner's attempt to backstab Owens (before the military arrived) so I wouldn't think he actually cut off the entire facility's ability to communicate with the outside world. Just the phone Owens was using.
But, hooray for the Atlantean Sword!
It was one of the melee weapons given to one of the other 6 prisoners that the demogorgon slaughtered there in episode 7, & was just still there on the floor, after the fact. Hop had a spear. Dmitri & another guy had battle axes, & a couple guys had those swords. I had to go back to remember that myself, because this waiting a month for the finale is kind of a crap format that has you forgetting thingsI LOL'd at that- I was saying: "Okay, where did Conan's sword suddenly appear from... awww, ta hell with it. Kill that bastard!!!"
I just don't get the issue. Seems like a tempest in a teapot to me. With streaming platforms, what difference does it make? I mean the whole season amounts to just under 13 hours. Does it really matter that they broke it down into 9 blocks of varying lengths instead of 12 or 13 more consistently timed blocks?Why did that finale need to be 2 and a half hours long, when you could have made it just 2 episodes in an arc based streaming series. There was a lot of stuff at the beginning which could have filled maybe even a shorter episode in itself.
As for the episode lengths, I'm honestly kind of surprised Netflix even does episodes at all, and doesn't just release the whole thing one massive chunk, and just leave it up to us to pick when and where we want to stop.
This season was pretty serialized though, and I'm not just talking about Stranger Things, I'm talking about all of their shows in general. I've been watching The Dragon Prince and with at least the first four episodes of that, there is not no break between episode. Each one has literally picked up exactly where the last one picked up, honestly the ends of the episodes are little jarring, because it just stops, and then just picks up with the next episode.Stranger Things used an episodic format from the start, so its never going to be broadcast in the manner of a long-form film. Moreover, breaking the season is not much different than the practice traditional TV used to employ with breaks (with a tease or cliffhanger in some cases) before holidays, or saving crucial points of a season arc for "sweeps". In Netflix's case, the broadcast format also encourages more social media discussion attention, particularly about series where the fate of favorite characters are up in the air.
That's a good point.I would liken the episode concept on streaming shows to chapter breaks on DVD/Blu-Ray. It would be pretty hard to fast forward to a specific scene if a 13 hour season were on one file like a movie.
Yeah, that would be nice.Come to think of it, I don't know why streaming services don't put chapter breaks in episodes and movies anyway as it would be a lot easier to find specific scenes and moments if they had them.
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