barbara_schatz
feb 2022 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
Nuestras actualizaciones aún están en desarrollo. Si bien la versión anterior de el perfil ya no está disponible, estamos trabajando activamente en mejoras, ¡y algunas de las funciones que faltan regresarán pronto! Mantente al tanto para su regreso. Mientras tanto, el análisis de calificaciones sigue disponible en nuestras aplicaciones para iOS y Android, en la página de perfil. Para ver la distribución de tus calificaciones por año y género, consulta nuestra nueva Guía de ayuda.
Distintivos2
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
Reseñas9
Clasificación de barbara_schatz
How the doc reviewer could have said Scrubs was realistic was full of utter BS. Scrubs was ridic. The Pitt is as real as the hospital I am familiar with. You want to see MY hospital, watch the award winning documentary The Waiting Room.
I was never there during what happens in the end of this season but I was in there during many a crisis, lockdown, expecting gang violence retaliation to come in through the front door.
Homeboy ambulance drop off. Shootings at the door, injuring other patients and docs.
The Pitt is as realistic as I have ever seen it. Not just the drama of the medical cases but the drama of the staff. Everything from PTSD to newbies to in house drug abuse is very realistically approached.
Another thing The Pitt nails is the LIMITS to what medicine/an ER can do, in particular in a situation that may or may not be developing.
The characters/personalities are very compelling and well written and what the heck happened to Noah Wylie?!!!?? Damn, it's not pretty, but he is PERFECTLY cast for his role.
This show is MORE than worth the time it takes to watch.
I was never there during what happens in the end of this season but I was in there during many a crisis, lockdown, expecting gang violence retaliation to come in through the front door.
Homeboy ambulance drop off. Shootings at the door, injuring other patients and docs.
The Pitt is as realistic as I have ever seen it. Not just the drama of the medical cases but the drama of the staff. Everything from PTSD to newbies to in house drug abuse is very realistically approached.
Another thing The Pitt nails is the LIMITS to what medicine/an ER can do, in particular in a situation that may or may not be developing.
The characters/personalities are very compelling and well written and what the heck happened to Noah Wylie?!!!?? Damn, it's not pretty, but he is PERFECTLY cast for his role.
This show is MORE than worth the time it takes to watch.
I saw this movie back in 1989 and it blew my mind. Just like today it broke a lot of rules especially about endings.
I saw it in '89 when I was still dating my husband to be. We are still married today and haven't forgotten this movie. But in an era that is 30 years removed from Reagan Bush where males ensure that mass shootings happen 1.5 per each day in America this movie has less impact in the here and now then it did back when it was brand new.
The whole thing had and has a kind of surreal edge, somewhere between the aunjanue taking a Valium at the beginning and the fact that once 4 AM is reached Melatonin is the master of our minds. Somehow the creators of the movie gave it a feel that was very much like the substances that were dominant.
Everything is a little weird, stark, edgy, all from the point when we reach 4 AM and onwards.
Once we get beyond the intro it is real time and once the Mcguffin is dropped the tension just builds. There is a bit of comedy but things get worse and heavier as we tend towards the inevitable end in real time.
Another issue in this movie is that it is recommended to young people who are curious about how people dealt with crises before Internet connectivity.
Without having instant access to instant communication and information people rely on things like word of mouth, hoping people will relay messages, passing on rumors and pay phones. Otherwise they have to travel to the person to whom they wish to communicate.
The hero spends most of his time running around trying to locate his lady and find a way out. It is really weird and indicative of the Reagan Bush era how he is not really willing to say what the problem is and comes up with every excuse (toxic fire with cyanide cloud is just one) under the sun except impending nuclear war when dealing with people.
The closer we get to the very non Hollywood ending the more chaotic things become.
Our hero is never in control but it comes home poignantly as we proceed towards the final quarter of the movie when the surrealism and chaos amps up (cops abandoning the scene scene).
It only took an hour for a rumor to start spreading through the entire city. Without digital connectivity In the middle of the night.
This movie is commendable and recommended for a lot of reasons but be ready for a very non Hollywood ending.
In the end I was kind of left wondering did the war start the rumors or did the rumors start the war. Either seemed equally possible.
The extended ending scenes with them trying to comfort each other through the horror is a beautiful illustration of what love is really about.
Basically if you don't shed a tear at the end you don't really have a soul.
I saw it in '89 when I was still dating my husband to be. We are still married today and haven't forgotten this movie. But in an era that is 30 years removed from Reagan Bush where males ensure that mass shootings happen 1.5 per each day in America this movie has less impact in the here and now then it did back when it was brand new.
The whole thing had and has a kind of surreal edge, somewhere between the aunjanue taking a Valium at the beginning and the fact that once 4 AM is reached Melatonin is the master of our minds. Somehow the creators of the movie gave it a feel that was very much like the substances that were dominant.
Everything is a little weird, stark, edgy, all from the point when we reach 4 AM and onwards.
Once we get beyond the intro it is real time and once the Mcguffin is dropped the tension just builds. There is a bit of comedy but things get worse and heavier as we tend towards the inevitable end in real time.
Another issue in this movie is that it is recommended to young people who are curious about how people dealt with crises before Internet connectivity.
Without having instant access to instant communication and information people rely on things like word of mouth, hoping people will relay messages, passing on rumors and pay phones. Otherwise they have to travel to the person to whom they wish to communicate.
The hero spends most of his time running around trying to locate his lady and find a way out. It is really weird and indicative of the Reagan Bush era how he is not really willing to say what the problem is and comes up with every excuse (toxic fire with cyanide cloud is just one) under the sun except impending nuclear war when dealing with people.
The closer we get to the very non Hollywood ending the more chaotic things become.
Our hero is never in control but it comes home poignantly as we proceed towards the final quarter of the movie when the surrealism and chaos amps up (cops abandoning the scene scene).
It only took an hour for a rumor to start spreading through the entire city. Without digital connectivity In the middle of the night.
This movie is commendable and recommended for a lot of reasons but be ready for a very non Hollywood ending.
In the end I was kind of left wondering did the war start the rumors or did the rumors start the war. Either seemed equally possible.
The extended ending scenes with them trying to comfort each other through the horror is a beautiful illustration of what love is really about.
Basically if you don't shed a tear at the end you don't really have a soul.
So sad that the producers chose to not read or simply ignore the source material. The Running Man was an amazing and prophetic novella that I read in the early 80s.
It is eerily like today but without the internet. It is full of greedy male controlled corporations that have destroyed all safety nets. It is hard to get and keep a job, hard to make expenses if you have one or even three jobs. Healthcare is nearly impossible to access. New flu and other pandemics rage. Reality TV with surreally high stakes rule and billboards for legal cannabis are everywhere. The routine and institulinized racism, misogyny and homophobia complete the prophecy perfectly.
Of course none of us could have known this in the 80s. All we knew was this novella was dark and amazing.
Then this dreadful movie gets released. It is like they did not read or chose to ignore the important points in the source material.
It is as if they thought casting Swartzeneggar in the role of a small, weak, utterly unempowered main character in the story would make up for their plot oversights. It. Does. Not.
I mean, seriously, this was worse than David Lynch's Dune.
It is eerily like today but without the internet. It is full of greedy male controlled corporations that have destroyed all safety nets. It is hard to get and keep a job, hard to make expenses if you have one or even three jobs. Healthcare is nearly impossible to access. New flu and other pandemics rage. Reality TV with surreally high stakes rule and billboards for legal cannabis are everywhere. The routine and institulinized racism, misogyny and homophobia complete the prophecy perfectly.
Of course none of us could have known this in the 80s. All we knew was this novella was dark and amazing.
Then this dreadful movie gets released. It is like they did not read or chose to ignore the important points in the source material.
It is as if they thought casting Swartzeneggar in the role of a small, weak, utterly unempowered main character in the story would make up for their plot oversights. It. Does. Not.
I mean, seriously, this was worse than David Lynch's Dune.