jedi573
Well-Known Member
To be fair, I do ask it like that on bigger crime scenes.Detective arrives at crime scene... "What'd we got?"
To be fair, I do ask it like that on bigger crime scenes.Detective arrives at crime scene... "What'd we got?"
And do you also say that to your wife when you get home and the kids are on "time-out"?To be fair, I do ask it like that on bigger crime scenes.
Detective arrives at crime scene... "What'd we got?"
To be fair, I do ask it like that on bigger crime scenes.
HA! That's great!
Sometimes I teach screenwriting and I always have students that want to adapt some anecdote from their life. And when it doesn't flow like a story should I point it out, and they always say "But that's how it happened." Real life doesn't make for 2 hour stories!
kid dropping a lego construction (spiderman homecoming, IT)
On a related note, the same goes for any kind of war movie set in any period, people complain (rightly) that everything/everybody is too close together, they aren't spread out enough. Even though this is a valid criticism you can't always space people or vehicles out properly because realistic spacing would mean that you would only have one person/plane/tank in frame unless you pulled way back, in which case everything then looks really small.
I absolutely love most of those "Hitler rants" clips, not the least because it is a stellar performance by Bruno Gans, those videos only work for someone who doesn't understand a single word of German. Unfortunately, I do. It's a second language to me. So, the cognitive dissonance is strong in these clips... Ah well...
I absolutely love most of those "Hitler rants" clips, not the least because it is a stellar performance by Bruno Gans, those videos only work for someone who doesn't understand a single word of German. Unfortunately, I do. It's a second language to me. So, the cognitive dissonance is strong in these clips... Ah well...
I actually watched it two or three weeks ago and it was a really good movie.Heh. Maybe you need to watch them with the sound muted.
I kind of feel bad for Gans. The movie is most well-remembered for the parodies. But his perfect performance is what makes these clips work so well.
Bad science. They screw up stuff that people with a high school education and a tiny bit of research should get right. This was TV, but I am watching an episode of Voyager and the are talking about how dangerous 500 degrees Kelvin is. That's around 226 c or 440 f. And there was an explosion when they tried to teleport some deuterium. That's just an isotope of hydrogen.
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Why is it always a main character, or important person, that's the last one standing in a battle or fight? Thousand people get slaughtered, and yet it's the prince, or king, or whoever, that's stumbling around, the last to die, usually after a poetic moment with a villain, or loved one that came upon them at the last possible moment.