Azure Flame
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- Aug 26, 2010
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- 8w7
How does that work?
I'm an aspiring rich person. I am taking their side, because I aspire to be there some day.
How does that work?
Otherwise I wasn't pleased with the ending. As far as I can tell, everyone on earth becomes a citizen of elysium, flies up to elysium, stinks it up with their filth until it becomes another crappy earth.
I also consider myself part of "the 1%," even though I am broke and have no money. So this movie was kind of insulting to me. I felt like it was pandering to a larger audience.
I'm an aspiring rich person. I am taking their side, because I aspire to be there some day.
What, the "mob throwing food and prepping to storm the Bastille" audience?
Well... which is the better Jodie Foster movie, this, or the Beaver?
Dear God. Did someone drag "The Beaver" with Crazy Mel into this discussion now?![]()
That doesn't work very well and perpetuates the power structure.I'm an aspiring rich person. I am taking their side, because I aspire to be there some day.
That doesn't work very well and perpetuates the power structure.
Right. The bottom 80% will still have around 7% of the wealth.He thinks that doesn't matter because he'll be at the top. In reality, he may become upper middle class, but he will not be wealthy on the level the Koch Brothers are wealthy.
The part I didn't understand: (spoiler alert)
Well if an INTP doesn't get it, it must be a big hole.i didn't get that either, actually, and had the same issue -- but I was going to check to see if I missed a plot point somewhere. It did seem ho-hum contrived. That's what I meant by, "no surprises here." The plot works as I expected it.
Well if an INTP doesn't get it, it must be a big hole.
On the other hand, if he had lived happily ever after with Frey and Matilda I think it would look even more contrived. So maybe they just couldn't figure out a creative ending.
Pretty good review. I agree, it would get pretty complicated if everyone was [almost] immortal- that was kind of a big hole too, and wasn't really addressed. The health care should have been a little more realistic- or else the changes which would come with such things should have been. I didn't think the theme was as simplistic as they make it seem though, and I think overall it was still a good movie.It did highlight a huge problem -- such a moment (with flashbacks) should have been more momentous and emotional. I didn't really feel much at all.
Thought this review was kind of amusing.
http://popwatch.ew.com/2013/08/10/elysium-ending/
i didn't get that either, actually, and had the same issue -- but I was going to check to see if I missed a plot point somewhere. It did seem ho-hum contrived. That's what I meant by, "no surprises here." The plot works as I expected it.
Dear God. Did someone drag "The Beaver" with Crazy Mel into this discussion now?![]()
Carlyle or however-you-spell-it encrypted it that way when he wrote it at his desk. He had the option to set it as incapacitate vs. lethal and chose lethal. I assumed if you tried to extract it without a proper code it kills the vessel as a form of copyright protection. Let's hope the RIAA and MPAA don't get any ideas.
I thought the movie was very average, its message heavy handed and lacking nuance, storyline old as time, ultimately unsatisfying. The medbay concept seemed incredibly contrived (there didn't seem to be a reason for their scarcity other than a tiring "RICH PEOPLE ARE MEAN BOOHOO" cliche) and characters did things because "movie." Huge step down from D9. Thought Matt Damon was good but Jodie was shockingly terrible and wooden, but since the rest of the movie was written that way I don't know what she could have done.
I thought the setting was nicely realized and the tech was cool. I found myself thinking of the difficulty in creating sci-fi movies in the sense that you need to create a nicely self-contained and sensible universe as an extra step to creating a good movie, which seems to be the genre's downfall for me recently.