tpaine posted:
within the first two minutes this guy says that macready "will be the last man standing at the end of the movie"
2. jump scenes that will make you jump even if you've seen the movie before, because the preceding scenes are slightly repetitive (blood testing, performing cpr on guy who had heart attack) so even if you know it's coming, you can't remember exactly when, so the repetition before has you going "this time it'll jump scare, this time, this... oh shit!"
tpaine posted:i saw another vid where the guy argued that the whiskey he hands childs is actually a bottle of gas for a molotov cocktail and he sees that childs just drinks it down and the little laugh is him realizing that the alien will freeze and survive and probably assimilate the earth. just like Today
woah
The Thing to me is pretty explicitly a statement on the horror of selective biological existence & capitalism, in which the most competitive survivor thrives by ruthlessly eviscerating all opposition regardless of how miserable a world it creates. I can understand modern ideology missing the social critique because people are fucking stupid, but misinterpreting the point that severely is goddamn mysterious. Viable interpretations of the movie fit with either gnostic or athiestic cosmologies, but certainly not with an idea of a spiritual antagonist that can be opposed by fundamental purity/humanity.
gay_swimmer posted:I'm watching The Young Pope. it owns and it's only in the 5th episode that the Pope says the line 'I am the young pope'
The doc relies on very selective points to construct its narrative; geopolitical complexity is reduced to strongman narcissism, technoculture is simplified and its actors taken at face value, its treatment of radicalism in the US erases black/socialist struggle while radicalism in MENA is presented through the lens of orientalism and poetic justice. In short, it is non-marxist and consistently erases class. Yet this presents a useful opportunity to reach/educate people dissatisfied and questioning liberalism and the current state of the world.
Starting end of November I will work on an effortpost to meticulously go through the film, point out what is has been left out, contextualise/correct facts it does include and present a more accurate analysis. I'm not an expert so will be learning as I go. It will be far easier, more interesting/fun, and the results of much better quality if some of you want to hop on to a collaborate document and contribute also. It's already online with the film transcript, so PM me for the link.
gay_swimmer posted:I'm watching The Young Pope. it owns and it's only in the 5th episode that the Pope says the line 'I am the young pope'
http://www.avclub.com/review/parts-jon-glaser-loves-gear-shouldnt-fit-together--244788 posted:The title (and some of the advertising) make Jon Glaser Loves Gear out to be a reality show about buying stuff, and the enjoyment of that stuff... Each item, as it’s quickly introduced, is greeted with an onscreen graphic with its details: a particular watch, for example, or a jacket, each with their manufacturer listed. Is this clever product placement? Is this how a show as weird as Jon Glaser Loves Gear actually funds itself? Or is it just taking the idea of this fake reality show to its logical, realistic conclusion?
It's easily the most meta thing I've seen in a long time but also the dumbest in terms of humor which is a great combination. An elaborate prank on the sponsors who find themselves associated with an incredibly annoying and loathsome personality? An elaborate prank on the network itself, considering the first scene of the first episode is Glaser pitching the show to the execs? Whatever it is, it's way more absurd and funny than I expected.
4 episodes in so far. Kind of hard to get hold of so if you're interested, PM me for invites to the secret MP4 forum