- Joined
- Nov 3, 2014
- Messages
- 1,452
- Reaction score
- 14
The puppet was incredibly detailed and far better-looking than fatass Woodruff in the suit. It just wasn't implemented well on screen.
The puppet was incredibly detailed and far better-looking than fatass Woodruff in the suit. It just wasn't implemented well on screen.
I don't want this guy directing the new Alien movie unless they get someone else to write and hopefully he'll be inspired by the time he starts shooting, I don't want another generic mocumentary with wasteland sci-fi visuals.
Would the derelict ship have been out of the range of the explosion at the end of Aliens?
Bishop did mention a "vapor cloud the size of Nebraska" but even he might have been exaggerating to make a point. Or you could just assume that Newt's family really did drive that far away. It is an entire planet after all and the ship went undetected for decades.
I always thought the latter. Ripley even accuses Burke of that in Aliens, right?was it just coincidence that the colony was set up within driving distance of the Derelict ship? Or was the site deliberately suggested by the company...
Originally.. but then they changed that because it really made no sense (even visually in Alien).Wasn't LV-426 described as a "planetoid"? It really wasn't that big...
Yup, especially after Chappie.
Which I'm hearing it isn't nearly as bad as critics say it is.
Just saw Chappie, it was bloated, aimless, visuals were stale, direction and cinematography were uninspired, script was kinda dumb.
Story was good though, characters were pretty good too, Chappie and his development were excellent, Copley is boss.
Overall, I don't want this guy directing the new Alien movie unless they get someone else to write and hopefully he'll be inspired by the time he starts shooting, I don't want another generic mocumentary with wasteland sci-fi visuals.
I always thought the latter. Ripley even accuses Burke of that in Aliens, right?
Would the derelict ship have been out of the range of the explosion at the end of Aliens?
She accused Burke of giving the colonists the coordinates to the derelict without warning them about what was there, not that he deliberately chose the site of Hadley's Hope based on it's proximity to the ship. He probably had nothing to do with picking the colonists' location considering he would have been a teenager when they first broke ground.
I think I remember reading in the Aliens: Colonial Marines Technical Manual that the derelict ship was protected by a mountain range, which enables Weyland-Yutani to go back to the planet and get eggs.
I'm actually a fan of them, I think those rumors were false.It's not, people just hate Die Antwoord in the film. I can't really say I blame them because Ninja is a complete jackass. There are even rumors about him being a nightmare on the set. Yolandi isn't that bad, but her association with such a slime ball character makes people not like her.
Yes, the score was pretty good, I liked all performances, in fact, regardless of some iffy acting by Die Antwoord, both did mostly a very good job, I did feel sympathy even for Ninja at the end, all the characters are and do exactly what they're supposed to do, and they ALL play a part in Chappie's development, which was represented fantastically.There are a quite a few things that are great about CHAPPiE. An incredible score by Hans Zimmer, performances by Jackman, Copley and Patel are all great, and most of all the dynamic of CHAPPiE himself is what I loved the most. Underneath all that metal CHAPPiE is a person with real emotions and feelings. His struggle with understanding life, right from wrong and human behavior are easily the best parts in the film. I'm not saying it's a "great" film, but it does make you think about life and how humanity can find a way to prostitute just about anything.
I didn't hate Chappie, in fact, I think I liked it a lot, it's got a lot of heart, but I'm very aware of it's flaws and the fact that it's very derivative.And nevermind.
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