I thought the same! We had to use our imagination watching these movies on VHS on a 14" CRT TV from eight feet away.
Hello expensive hobby number one, meet expensive hobby number two
100% agree! RotJ is where the cracks started to show. I think people forget this because all the nonsense that followed, starting with the Special Editions, makes RotJ seem restrained in comparison.
In the first half of the film the audience is meant to think that Ripley is a heartless bitch, especially the airlock scene when she refuses to let the landing party return aboard. I've always thought that her saving the cat was a great narrative device to show us that she isn't this cold, heartless person. She was doing what was necessary to save as many members of the crew as possible.
One my favorite films https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lRu0OCub5m0
This is the correct answer.
https://www.smartcompany.com.au/industries/information-technology/sack-google-staff-pay-tech/
Yeah exactly, it seems like a such a shame that The Thing (1982) didn't find its audience until years later. Because I feel like that's as close as we got to seeing a John Carpenter film with a big budget and it was great.
John Carpenter > Steven Spielberg
I just watched the video, that's really interesting. Thanks for the explanation
No no, the Nikon incident at the waterslide hotel isn't Canon because it comes from the expanded universe novels that were published before Disney+ bought LucasArts.
Black Sabbath Never Say Die vibes
I call them groove breaks, when the song takes a little break and just grooves for a bit.
The video version of Even Flow by Pearl Jam has a great one, Stranglehold has one, the album version of Sweet Emotions has one as the intro, so maybe not technically a break.
Most recently, Edward Larkin, from the Short Treks episode "The Trouble with Edward".
Huh... the folding. I'm already mad that I can't get a solid 5 years out of a $1200 phone, there's no way I'm shelling out for a first wave foldy.