I thought AI was cool. I've never understood the hatred towards it.
I believe the reference you refer to is towards Eskimos not America Indians. Two separate groups.[/QUOTE]North. Damn it, it's good, goofy fun. It can be characterized as slightly racist, viz. American Indians
Colonel Green said:my knowledge of greek mythology was impressive enough to get me into the pants of an impressionable freshman on the girls rowing team
That's the basis for the whole series, yes.Neo has a box in his head that translates his thoughts into digital form
The "flash-forwards" he experiences in Zion could be read as subconscious thoughts and images picked up in the Matrix but not expressed until some later time. As for broadcasting signals, the fact that Sentinels operate individually suggests that they have broadcasting transmitters of their own. So Neo's theoretical transmitter wouldn't have to be that strong at all; it could be like an iTouch picking up a wireless internet connection in a Starbucks. That, and the whole upper levels of the planet could be bathed in a low-level Machine radio frequency could for all we know.and another box that broadcasts them as radio waves of sufficient power to either 1)reach Machine City from miles underground
Ethernet can yield stronger and faster connections than wireless.What's really hilarious is that when Neo gets to Machine City, they opt for a wired connection instead. WTF is up with that?
Yeah I liked that one. Although, I never read the book before seeing the film, and I think that's what ruins it for some people.Bicentennial Man is great underrated classic it's a brilliant film at least to me.
It really is underrated. I thought it was great when I watched it.
The other options are a program-Neo existing in the Matrix and protecting him like a guardian angel, which doesn't make sense; other programs protecting him, which is dramatically unsound and also doesn't make sense; and maybe something deriving from quantum entanglement, which is bizarre and extrinsic and never mentioned.
Waterworld. Especial the super expanded version. No, from a science view point it doesn't make sense.
Walt Disney's The Three Musketeers (This film was really my first exposure to the story of the Three Musketeers, and remains one of my two favorite on-screen depictions of the characters. Having subsequently read the novel, the characterizations were close enough to not be complete departures, but also 'fix' the novel's flaws, and I love Tim Curry's portrayal of Richelieu)
In the original Matrix movie, the Oracle, despite being coy, names Neo as the One. Neo is only saved from death at Cypher's hands when Tank (?) magically returns from the dead to back shoot Cypher. How did the Oracle know that Neo wouldn't perish in the "real" world? One obvious explanation is that Zion is part of the Matrix as well.
Matrix Revolutions opts for the interpretation that Zion and the "real" world is part of the system of control, so in that sense Revolutions doesn't reverse the original Matrix and Reloaded as well. The real world is part of the machine system, and the Oracle has access to information about it and can make predictions, as in the first movie. Neo can overwrite programs in the matrix and Neo can overwrite programs in the squids in the real world as well.
The question is whether the real world not being real at all is interesting. If the real world isn't real, then all that shooting is completely consequence free, so to me, the real world being another illusion isn't interesting. In fact, the sequels helped clear up what I considered to be a major flaw in the first movie, the probability that Zion was just another program.
Thinking about the Matrix movies reminds me that I forgot The Day the Earth Stood Still, in the superior modern version. There's another one I like that loads of people hate.
It's hard to see the overt hate for this movie, it does drag in places, I believe you could remove as much as ten minutes and it would be a better film for it. Or replace the ten minutes (or twenty) with different material. I've had friends who weren't trek fans say that TMP needed narration, interesting idea.Also I think TMP is brilliant, although I can mostly understand why other people dislike it.
Can you give me the idiot's guide explanation?
Walt Disney's The Three Musketeers (This film was really my first exposure to the story of the Three Musketeers, and remains one of my two favorite on-screen depictions of the characters. Having subsequently read the novel, the characterizations were close enough to not be complete departures, but also 'fix' the novel's flaws, and I love Tim Curry's portrayal of Richelieu)
Having not read the novel, what were the "flaws" that needed "fix"ing?
Great points and I liked all of these as well. A few others that I recently rewatched and many hated:Constantine. Pretty faithful to the original comic. Bothers some people because it is a "pro" religious film. The actor who played the crazy Russian cosmonaut in the movie Armageddon is a tattooed Satan.
Waterworld. Especial the super expanded version. No, from a science view point it doesn't make sense. But TPTB did create a interesting world right out of a golden age sci-fi novel.
The Postman. Another Kevin Costner movie. It was written by David Brin, nice.
Mission to Mars. The last five minutes sucked big time, but other than the ending a great, mostly scientifically accurate film. Love the "Mars Direct" hardware.
Event Horizon. Actual scared me.
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