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Reviews
Blue Beetle (2023)
Great times to be alive !!!
Billion dollar company makes a movie about billion dollar company being greedy and evil. Good guys win, eventually.
Billion dollar company makes a movie about small people being empowered. Small people are the good guys, just to be sure.
Billion dollar company tells the story about MILITARY billion dollar company doing wrong in some small "3rd world country", under some political agenda.
Some evil guys, from the billion dollar company, came to their redemption at the end. Some met their well deserved doom. No evil guys left.
Evil MILITARY billion dollar company turns good, at the end. They will work for the benefit of the mankind, from now on. Not against it,
Billion dollar company makes the movie where 80+ Mexican grandma is remembering her revolutionary days, while killing the bad guys (from the evil MILITARY billion dollar company) and shouting "down with the imperialists".
Billion dollar company treasures family values.
Everything is represented just as it is, around us, Or, at least, how the billion dollar company wants you to see it. It's a fantasy move, but, hey, we're sending the message!
God bless the billion dollar companies.
It's not like they could end the world hunger with all the money they have.
They just have to remind us how (hard) it is in the real, every day, life. Through a 104 million dollars budget fantasy movie.
Great times to be alive.
From: Long Day's Journey Into Night (2022)
OK!?
About 60 to 70 % of the dialogue spoken in this episode is the word OK. I paused around 41st minute, annoyed with how much everyone is telling each other that it's and they're and you're gonna be ... OK!? While no one, actually, is ... OK. OK? And all right. Dialogue s***s big time. The situation is not OK. The people involved are not OK. No need pointing it out how bad the situation is, but it, most definitely, is not OK. It, kind of, insults the intelligence of the viewer. NO ONE in real life, or fiction, talks like that. Unless the scriptwriter is dumbing it down. And that's SO NOT OK! People have emotional responses to certain things happening around them. They act rational or irational when they're having those responses. And that's OK. Not running around, while everything is falling apart, convincing yourself and everyone involved that it's (gonna be) OK.
Back to enduring last 10 minutes of 1st episode. Really trying to like this.
Star Trek: Discovery: Perpetual Infinity (2019)
I'll just leave this here ...
Many drawbacks in this episode, but Sonequa Martin-Green's overacting (overplaying) is so cringy and hard to watch! I understand that it is in the script and that it is required from her. She's portraying a character which suffers emotional shocks, one after another. But, how, in the hell, is it possible that no one, in the production team, after watching the final product, jumps and yells: FFS, what is this load of c**p!?