Oh wow, yeah, it's no wonder she changed her name! I wouldn't blame her!
In "A Quiet Place," while a family is out scavenging the stupid youngest boy picks up a toy that makes noise. The dad stops him from playing with it because making noise can get you killed. Behind his back, the stupid teenage daughter gives the kid the toy anyway. While walking home, the stupid youngest son turns the toy. It makes noise. Guess what happens next.
Actually, there's kind of a subversion.of that trope in "World War Z," and it's my favorite part of the movie.I don't know what it's called, but whenever the other characters don't believe/trust the protagonist, so said protagonist has to spend half the movie convincing them. Just get on with the story, already.
Kor
I've never seen BLUE BLOODS, though I have seen RANSOM, also with Wahlberg, playing a kidnapper. For me, he can do no wrong, as he visited my injured younger cousin in a Boston hospital after she was nearly killed by a drunken driver. He gave her his cap. This was about 1990.![]()
I was watching the third season of The Dragon Prince on Netflix recently and there was a scene where the soldiers that are about to march to war are given the choice to leave if they want and many of them do. I thought it was a neat subversion of that trope, especially for a kid's show.Just once I'd like to see a AIRPLANE-style moment where the base commander tells the packed room ''If anybody here isn't up to participating on this mission, you may leave now with nothing held against you''------and then they all do. This chestnut's been roasting since at least THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYO
The worst was some anthology show from the seventies, which had some plot to revive Nazi Germany. This guy had been living under an assumed American identity for thirty years, with no accent whatsoever. But as soon as the plot is uncovered and he is exposed and forced to admit what is going on, he switches mid-sentence to a strong German accent.When the spy is revealed and immediately reverts to his or her original accent. That's a sign of being a bad spy.
I remember reading on the internet -- maybe it was here -- where someone was actually upset Black Widow didn't revert to a Russian accent in Iron Man 2.
Speaking of reverting to original language, there's a similar trope that I don't necessarily hate but find funny. It's when a non-American actor stars as an American - complete with a pitch perfect American accent - but "fakes" their real accent for some situation.The worst was some anthology show from the seventies, which had some plot to revive Nazi Germany. This guy had been living under an assumed American identity for thirty years, with no accent whatsoever. But as soon as the plot is uncovered and he is exposed and forced to admit what is going on, he switches mid-sentence to a strong German accent.
And then there's Melina and Alexei's complete absence of Russian accents when we see them at the beginning of Black Widow, but then when we meet up with them later on they not only have accents but they speak with grammatical errors such as missing articles. Maybe their language skills regressed from two decades away from it. It makes more sense for Yelena since she was taken from the English-speaking environment as a child, whereas Melina and Alexei were speaking perfect English as adults.
Kor
- Ignoring basic laws of nature to have a story at all
Wasn't that about the time he was convicted for arson and had to do a bunch of community service?
Who are you talking about? Donnie has never done anything like that.
On a completely unrelated matter, his cheeseburgers are great.
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