Lulu_Cineasta
Joined Nov 2024
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What is there to say? My man Gerard Butler is the master of this type of movies. Arriving somewhere that is actually populated with someone that wants to kill him, then some type of rescue with a guy that was previously someone bad and a mission that it's impossible in every word of the sentence, but my boy manages to survive, after getting shot twice but not a single one into the motor.
Pure action. You may have 2 brain cells and still understand the movie, since there's no complicated storyline, just the fun of making an action movie and bullets flying everywhere.
I'm not even gonna analyse the parts that make no sense, cause thats not the point of this movie.
If you have no idea what to see, you cant be mad with this movie.
Pure action. You may have 2 brain cells and still understand the movie, since there's no complicated storyline, just the fun of making an action movie and bullets flying everywhere.
I'm not even gonna analyse the parts that make no sense, cause thats not the point of this movie.
If you have no idea what to see, you cant be mad with this movie.
The Last of Us series took an iconic game and managed to deliver a brutal, raw, and emotional adaptation that both respects the source material and breathes new life into it.
What's amazing is how the series doesn't shy away from moral complexity; Joel and Ellie make hard choices that have real, often tragic consequences, and the show dives deep into the cost of those choices.
If we compare this series to the well known TWD, we can find a lot of similarities, without 7 seasons (I'm not trash talking TWD). Here we got instead of a full group survival, we get the development between 2 characters that initially hated wach other but then proceed to make the hard choices together (but didnt bite anyones neck #RickGrimes). Fast zombies like Zombieland, but serious like TWD, as well as the different groups of survivors along the way. Searching for a cure, which in TWD stopped being a problem after Eugene,but the ending of The LAst of Us, showing that even after all the choices, all the problems to try to obtain a cure, nothing was more important than Ellie and Joel staying together. Pretty cool.
What's amazing is how the series doesn't shy away from moral complexity; Joel and Ellie make hard choices that have real, often tragic consequences, and the show dives deep into the cost of those choices.
If we compare this series to the well known TWD, we can find a lot of similarities, without 7 seasons (I'm not trash talking TWD). Here we got instead of a full group survival, we get the development between 2 characters that initially hated wach other but then proceed to make the hard choices together (but didnt bite anyones neck #RickGrimes). Fast zombies like Zombieland, but serious like TWD, as well as the different groups of survivors along the way. Searching for a cure, which in TWD stopped being a problem after Eugene,but the ending of The LAst of Us, showing that even after all the choices, all the problems to try to obtain a cure, nothing was more important than Ellie and Joel staying together. Pretty cool.
Congrats HBO, Chernobyl is honestly a masterpiece in the world of miniseries. It's not just a recounting of the disaster; it's an intense, atmospheric dive into the chaos, horror, and heroism of those who lived (and suffered) through one of the worst nuclear disasters ever. The show spares no detail, explaining every detail of what happened like I was a dumb child, and I really appreciate it.
What's most captivating is how Chernobyl captures not only the physical devastation but also the political and social fallout. It digs deep into the lies, denial, and cover-ups that worsened the tragedy and how those in power grappled with the consequences.
What's most captivating is how Chernobyl captures not only the physical devastation but also the political and social fallout. It digs deep into the lies, denial, and cover-ups that worsened the tragedy and how those in power grappled with the consequences.