• Veraxus
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    1 year ago

    The Mist

    That ending was one of the most brilliant gut-punches in film history. Stephen King himself said he wished he had written it.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Good to know. Wasn’t sure 3BP show would be good because I think the book was so slow. Probably lost in translation.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Yeah, I heard it was the next big scifi trilogy, but when I read it it was like “Really? This?”

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    Foundation. The books are okay. But the show has better character, escpecially the empire side. Great visual, and more griping plot

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Love the series but they are hard to compare with each other because the series have almost nothing to do with the books.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      The Empire Story Arc is great, the visual are awesome. Everything else is much worse, and the whole plot with hologram Seldon makes it a clown and loses its mysticism. Let’s see if The Mule arc is good enough to compensate now awful the Salvor Hardin is.

  • CYB3R
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    11 year ago

    If covers are allowed… I will always love you by Whitney Houston was so good people outside the US forgot/didn’t knew it was a cover.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Lord of the Rings. I’ve read the books before watching the movies (I saw them first like 3 years ago) and the books are just… walking… And they walked…. Walked…. They walked… so much walking…. still walking…. And then walking…

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Stalker. The movie, not necessarily the games.

    Roadside picnic is a fantastic book that feels thrilling for a scifi story. There’s everything you could hope for, from deep philosophical questions to fictional technology that’s described in a way that fascinates but doesn’t attempt to over-explain; there’s political implications to the geopolitics of the time that the authors consider. And at the center, an anti-hero who just wants to get his wish fulfilled and get out of this place, who’s willing to make a deal with the devil for it.

    To take all that and reimagine it as a long trialogue in an eerily deserted nature reserve/post-apocalyptic wasteland that touches upon all sorts of deep philosophy—from the divine to whether we can truly know ourselves; the struggle between logic and creativity; the vast ineffability of the natural world, not so much as Man vs. Nature conflict but as a reminder of how large and apathetic the natural world is to humanity—while maintaining a strained atmosphere of invisible threats that we never see. I could draw parallels to Dante’s Inferno and Sartre’s No Exit.

    Stalker ending spoiler

    Then for the protagonists to leave empty-handed after it all, too afraid to find out who they truly are deep down.

    chef’s kiss

    It is one of the most aesthetically beautiful films I’ve ever seen, and does something I wish more filmmakers would do: focus on atmosphere rather than plot and action. It sounds boring, but it was a transformative work of art.

    It’s dark, it’s broody, it’s strangely serene. I love it so much.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    Battlestar Galactica (2003) -Originally a mini-seris to pay homage to the original idea through the lens of current events exploded into to what is my favorite show to ever be on television. Informing so much of what TV sci-fi could be after it.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I’d say the reboot falls apart about 2/3 of the way through. The last cylon reveals felt very Lost/Lindelof where they’d painted themselves into a corner and hadn’t planned out the ending.

    • SkaveRat
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      61 year ago

      The reveal for example.

      Been a while since I read the book, and the reveal was similar, but a lot better in the movie

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Jaws the movie is much better than the book. None of the characters in the book are remotely likeable.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Is Interesting that in the Chinese version of Fight Club, its end with a message saying that after the final scene the narrator was arrested and institutionalized and the movement disbanded, making it more faithful to the original ending of the book.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      TBF that was a low bar to clear. They just had to make sure the show was better than a bunch of screaming children.

      However it is truly fantastic

    • @[email protected]
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      12
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      1 year ago

      In 1995, Dylan described his reaction to hearing Hendrix’s version: “It overwhelmed me, really. He had such talent, he could find things inside a song and vigorously develop them. He found things that other people wouldn’t think of finding in there. He probably improved upon it by the spaces he was using. I took license with the song from his version, actually, and continue to do it to this day.”

      Source