Agreed. I thought the movie was a great addition to the Mad Max films. As others have pointed out, some of the CGI was lacking, but other than that it was extremely enjoyable and well paced.
Agreed. I thought the movie was a great addition to the Mad Max films. As others have pointed out, some of the CGI was lacking, but other than that it was extremely enjoyable and well paced.
To the top with you! I see some opinions quoted, but yours is the right answer.
Background CGI for ensuring consistency and immersion is what CGI excels at. Human-based CGI still has the uncanny valley. I loved Furiosa, but you can easily tell when they had CGI humans for stunts.
It’s just another tool and directors need to choose the appropriate time to use it and when not to.
I’m with you. Knowing the general dislike of them, they’ve always been a guilty pleasure.
Jesse Plemons character in one of the Fargo seasons did this.
If someone walks into your house and shoots your family, would you want to know why? Would it be important to you to understand their motives?
I’m with you about Adam Savage. His philosophies about many aspects of life just resonate a lot with me and he is always so passionate about the things he’s discussing or working on.
His view on organization being a continuous process finally clicked with me and got me to start putting my workshop in order.
Agreed! He plays the stoic sociopath really well, which is what I always seem to see him playing - Breaking Bad, Fargo Season 2 (less a sociopath here, but made very questionable choices), Black Mirror.
Yeah, that’s Jesse Plemons. He’s married to Kirsten Dunst of all things. I just finished watching season 2 of Fargo with him and Dunst - both were amazing in it.
I always think of him as “Walmart Matt Damon”.
EDIT: Fixed his last name
I question if you’re American. No American I’ve ever met says “USA”. It’s always “US” or “Americans”. USA is only said as a chant of pride.
Humanity would absolutely be the abuser in this toxic relationship
I think OP was asking about young kids who are still learning to pronounce words correctly.
Didn’t we throw that litmus test out the window with 45?
I agree with the idea of small communities being interconnected with a massive distribution of public transit. I would love to walk everywhere from my daily necessities, but still making it easy to get to larger social centers for other needs. I think that should be the goal we strive for as a society.
Not what I said, but go ahead and make your absurd conclusions. Just for the record, I’m 100% for public transportation, EVs, renewable energy, and getting off the fossil fuel tit.
If we’re ever going to pull people along the path to that future, we have to accept and acknowledge the exceptions. Not all the time, but don’t ignore it like most articles I’ve read on the topic. I believe division occurs when people feel they are being ignored.
It shouldn’t. There should be acknowledgement of the exceptions.
You summarized perfectly the problem I see with the “fuck cars” crowd. They never acknowledge the need for cars in some cases. America’s population centers are definitely large cities where public transportation SHOULD be championed, but there has to be an acknowledgement of the rural population (around 15% in America I believe) where cars are a necessity.
And you’ve just summed up all religious conflicts.
Recently, For All Mankind, Season 1, the episode where the kid gets hit by a car and is in the hospital with a brain bleed. My son was in the hospital with a brain bleed right after his birthday and spent months in the hospital recovering. This episode hit real close to home.
I had to take a break half way through the episode and didn’t finish it until 2 weeks later.
too*