HottoyzJoker
Super Freak
AVPR was a sucktastic movie. Wolf was the only good thing about it.
if they are the same species, the difference is very clear and can be explained only by aging.
that is without question the screenplay was made without any love for the characters. just some stamps. it could have any other two fantastic species, and nothing would change.Or a bad screenplay...
sorry, a downside of being sapient.You guys put WAY too much thoughts
for me that's difficult, as they are mostly dull and somewhat dumb. title creatures and their specifics are the only thing that interest me in predator movies.Just enjoy the movie for what they are.
And yet, the Predator liked to hang out in a freezing cold slaughterhouse, Keyes' liquid nitrogen had no effect on him, and the ship was filled a dry ice type fog that clouded being able to see Harrigan's lower body in Predator vision. The stuff that comes out of the mask tubes when they unmask could be some kind of coolant. They hunt in the heat for the challenge of it?that would contradict the very plot of P1 and P2 time and place choice. "it happens only in hottest years" - P1, and temperature announcement in P2 - 100 or 110 F, i don't remember exactly.
that would contradict the very plot of P1 and P2 time and place choice. "it happens only in hottest years" - P1, and temperature announcement in P2 - 100 or 110 F, i don't remember exactly.
found it in subtitles:
and there was no bright sun when they fought, it was night or early morning.
hey P., ever given any thought as to why the inside of the predator's mouth is pink, yet he bleeds flourescent green, as opposed to red? always wondered if there was some analogous example in nature, or if physiology wise, there's not really a link between our tissues being pink and blood being red.
well, my variant removes the need for uncomfortable conditions for creatures who like comfort (in original movies, where predators flee after a single wound, don't oppose anybody dangerous face to face and remove greatest threats in the beginning to have a comforting prolonged hunt with lesser danger after that, not in following fanmade universe where they are battle monks): heat close to homeworld conditions gives them better physical abilities.Doesn't necessarily contradict the plot. They may prefer hot hunting environments because it brings out the toughest, most hostile game. But for their own living/feeding/lounging conditions, they could prefer something cooler. I only ever saw their being drawn to heat as a prerequisite for good hunting, not a preference for anything outside of the sport.
hey P., ever given any thought as to why the inside of the predator's mouth is pink, yet he bleeds flourescent green, as opposed to red? always wondered if there was some analogous example in nature, or if physiology wise, there's not really a link between our tissues being pink and blood being red.
Stan Winston says in the P2 DVD features they're like snakes and describes the patterns on their skin/foreheads as being different like snakes.for me it is a cold-blooded creature - they depend on either surrounding temperature (all snakes, frogs, lizards), or amounts of eaten food and freed energy (i guess it's true for same creatures), or muscle vibrations to artificially raise temperature (some snakes or just one kind, i can google that article i took it from), or altogether.
Stan Winston says in the P2 DVD features they're like snakes and describes the patterns on their skin/foreheads as being different like snakes.
4) if green goo was blood, it would go close to skin surface and cause predator glow in the dark. it doesn't. at the same time skin, mouth, eyes and all the rest cannot function without constant blood current.
my theory is that green goo is a liquid between muscles, not blood flowing through them.
yeah i remember it this way, too. they said something about how it was that for a casual person they are all alike, like snakes, but like actual snakes, they are all different. no biology references.Think he was just referring to the variation in patterns, not necessarily making a statement about their internal biology.
look.But look at human beings. Their flesh is red and their blood red, but melanin's contribution to skin tone overrides that of muscle and blood. For instance, you could have an extremely pale person looking white as cheese. Upon close inspection, you may see veins of different colors, but the overall impression is white. Or maybe you have someone with a tan or olive skin tone. You'd still register the olive before anything else. And the darker the skin, the harder it is to spot those variations caused by veins and flesh.
Predator skin could have enough pigment to prevent the glowing green of its blood from showing through. It may even be thicker than human skin, adding to its masking power.
Add to that the fact that the Predator in the first film coughs up the same green goo after being crushed by the log. Doubt that it would be muscular fluid in that situation.
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