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Shakespeare
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 18 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 7744
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Posted: August 20 2007 at 16:49 |
LION KING! Cheesy, childish, and so touching.
Fantomas, you've got the funniest sig ever, don't change it EVER.
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martinprog77
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 31 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2523
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 04:56 |
from the list Mulholland Drive
my favorite is Memento
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Nothing can last
there are no second chances.
Never give a day away.
Always live for today.
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 02 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10261
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 05:39 |
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
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Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. But no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
Edited by BaldFriede - August 22 2007 at 04:29
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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andu
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 27 2006
Location: Romania
Status: Offline
Points: 3089
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 06:54 |
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. but no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
|
Oh come on, who needs science-solid background for raging blockbusters?! That DNA stuff was only the pretext needed in order to unleash the great fun and thrills put together by some great visual narration & story telling (well maybe not that great as I've seen better Spielberg films and better blockbusters, but it still was a great ride )
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Shakespeare
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 18 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 7744
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 09:03 |
Teh LORD OF THE RINGS suckS BEcaUSE GAndalF DOES magic, AND EVERYOne KNows THEres no sUCH thing AS MAGIC! SO FAKE H8D IT.
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Zargus
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 08 2005
Location: Sweden
Status: Offline
Points: 3491
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 09:51 |
Well out of thos lised i go with Hot Shots! "Pudding?"
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jimidom
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 02 2007
Location: Houston, TX USA
Status: Offline
Points: 570
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Posted: August 21 2007 at 16:29 |
From this list, Citizen Kane.
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"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." - HST
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Piotr Buendia
Forum Groupie
Joined: July 27 2006
Location: Romania
Status: Offline
Points: 51
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Posted: August 25 2007 at 01:29 |
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"You are free to do as we tell you."(Bill Hicks in Revelations)
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daSilva
Forum Groupie
Joined: August 20 2007
Location: Portugal
Status: Offline
Points: 40
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Posted: August 25 2007 at 18:32 |
since Blade Runner isn't here I had to go with First Blood.
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I would never die for my beliefs because I might be wrong. (Bertrand Russell)
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Shakespeare
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 18 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 7744
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Posted: August 25 2007 at 18:48 |
andu wrote:
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. but no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
|
Oh come on, who needs science-solid background for raging blockbusters?! That DNA stuff was only the pretext needed in order to unleash the great fun and thrills put together by some great visual narration & story telling (well maybe not that great as I've seen better Spielberg films and better blockbusters, but it still was a great ride )
| Maybe it wasn't very clear, but my post below this one was meant to be in reply to this. It goes:
Teh LORD OF THE RINGS suckS BEcaUSE GAndalF DOES magic, AND EVERYOne KNows THEres no sUCH thing AS MAGIC! SO FAKE H8D IT.
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 02 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10261
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Posted: August 25 2007 at 19:00 |
Shakespeare wrote:
andu wrote:
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. but no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
|
Oh come on, who needs science-solid background for raging blockbusters?! That DNA stuff was only the pretext needed in order to unleash the great fun and thrills put together by some great visual narration & story telling (well maybe not that great as I've seen better Spielberg films and better blockbusters, but it still was a great ride )
|
Maybe it wasn't very clear, but my post below this one was meant to be in reply to this. It goes:
Teh LORD OF THE RINGS suckS BEcaUSE GAndalF DOES magic, AND EVERYOne KNows THEres no sUCH thing AS MAGIC! SO FAKE H8D IT.
|
You are comparing apples and oranges. "Lord of the Rings" does not claim to be a scientific thriller; once you accept the magical setting of the story there is no contradiction. But "Jurassic Park" claims to be based on science, and even if you accept its speculative element "we can reconstruct the genes of dinosaurs" you have to adhere to certain laws of biology, in essence the growth rate of animals. I would have less problems with the movie if someone decoded the sequence of dinosaur genes today, they would start breeding them today, and then the movie did some kind of fast forward of about 30 or 40 years. Crichton used to be an interesting author; his first book "The Andromeda Strain" was a good read, but "Jurassic Park" is a humbug which made me laugh when I read it.
Edited by BaldFriede - August 26 2007 at 08:05
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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Jimsey
Forum Newbie
Joined: August 03 2006
Location: Finland
Status: Offline
Points: 11
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Posted: August 26 2007 at 04:41 |
Off that list I picked Evil Dead, although I was a big American Ninja fan as a kid.
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mystic fred
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 13 2006
Location: Londinium
Status: Offline
Points: 4252
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Posted: August 26 2007 at 05:13 |
none of the above - the best film ever made is......
THE ITALIAN JOB!
OR - that Spielberg film DUEL or Hitchcock's PSYCHO
Edited by mystic fred - August 26 2007 at 05:19
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Prog Archives Tour Van
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progadicto
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 19 2005
Location: Chile
Status: Offline
Points: 4316
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Posted: August 28 2007 at 22:20 |
Great list of B classics! Even when I love Raimi and Jackson's first works my vote goes for that porn jewel called THE DEVIL AND MRS. JONES, even when CAFE FLESH is much better in the porn genre...
Some other classics not listed: SUSPIRIA, THE TOXIC AVENGER, PORKY'S, TAXANDRIA, SCANNERS, HEBREW HAMMER, GODS MUST BE CRAZY, DEEP THROAT, DRUGSTORE COWBOYS, anything by Alex de la Iglesia, WISHMASTER, HELLRAISER, and of course ATTACK OF THE KILLER TOMATOES...
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... E N E L B U N K E R...
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1800iareyay
Prog Reviewer
Joined: November 18 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2492
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Posted: August 28 2007 at 22:31 |
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. But no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
|
Actaully, according to the book they've been breeding dinosaurs for several years before the events of the book. Besides, if you can splice the genes of a frog into cultivated dinosaur DNA, and ensure all the animals are female (until the frog DNA kicks in), then it's conceivable that tehy could speed up growth. For the first point, the dinosaurs have great difficulty adapting, as evidenced by the book sequel The lost World. Dinosaurs are dying out from a disease that is passed from scavenger to carnivore then to herbivores (thsoe who survive attacks are infected). I thought the plot was extremely thought out and Chricton deserves props for proposing the idea of dinosaur revival in a manner that seems scientifically feasable
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Shakespeare
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 18 2006
Status: Offline
Points: 7744
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Posted: August 28 2007 at 22:36 |
BaldFriede wrote:
Shakespeare wrote:
andu wrote:
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. but no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
|
Oh come on, who needs science-solid background for raging blockbusters?! That DNA stuff was only the pretext needed in order to unleash the great fun and thrills put together by some great visual narration & story telling (well maybe not that great as I've seen better Spielberg films and better blockbusters, but it still was a great ride )
|
Maybe it wasn't very clear, but my post below this one was meant to be in reply to this. It goes:
Teh LORD OF THE RINGS suckS BEcaUSE GAndalF DOES magic, AND EVERYOne KNows THEres no sUCH thing AS MAGIC! SO FAKE H8D IT.
|
You are comparing apples and oranges. "Lord of the Rings" does not claim to be a scientific thriller; once you accept the magical setting of the story there is no contradiction. But "Jurassic Park" claims to be based on science, and even if you accept its speculative element "we can reconstruct the genes of dinosaurs" you have to adhere to certain laws of biology, in essence the growth rate of animals. I would have less problems with the movie if someone decoded the sequence of dinosaur genes today, they would start breeding them today, and then the movie did some kind of fast forward of about 30 or 40 years. Crichton used to be an interesting author; his first book "The Andromeda Strain" was a good read, but "Jurassic Park" is a humbug which made me laugh when I read it.
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Good point, but all the same, we are dealing with fiction here. And Jake also gave a good argument/point/contribution/elaboration whatever you want to call it.
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Tapfret
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
Joined: August 12 2007
Location: Bryant, Wa
Status: Offline
Points: 8581
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Posted: August 29 2007 at 00:51 |
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob |
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise: 1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful. 2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives, just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he would have to wait for decades. But no, in that movie (as in the book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here they are full size already. Ridiculous!
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One word....
Dinosteroids
Ooh, need to add that to the 'you make word' thread.
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 02 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10261
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Posted: August 29 2007 at 02:57 |
1800iareyay wrote:
BaldFriede wrote:
1800iareyay wrote:
^ I forgot to mention the first Jurassic Park. Very different from the book, but still captures Crichton's disgust at humans playing God. If that is the real plot to JP4, I think I'm going to sob
|
Jurassic Park suffers from its impossible plot. Let's take it for
granted that people may somehow be able to find the original genes for
some dinosaurs and be able to grow them. Then some questions arise:
1) How could they survive? All animals rely on symbiotic activity with
all kinds of other animals, plants and bacteria; do we still have the necessary environment for dinosaurs? Doubtful.
2) What's even more important: How long do you think it took a dinosaur
to grow to full size? They probably grew all throughout their lives,
just as their closest living relatives, the crocodiles, do. But it
takes a crocodile decades to grow to full size; a Nile crocodile of a
length of 9 or 10 meters is around 70 years old (you hardly find them
of that size anymore because sadly they are usually shot before they
reach that age). If someone discovered the secret of breeding them, he
would have to wait for decades. But no, in that movie (as in the
book) someone discovers the secret to breed them, and presto, here
they are full size already. Ridiculous!
| Actaully, according to the book they've been breeding dinosaurs for several years before the events of the book. Besides, if you can splice the genes of a frog into cultivated dinosaur DNA, and ensure all the animals are female (until the frog DNA kicks in), then it's conceivable that tehy could speed up growth. For the first point, the dinosaurs have great difficulty adapting, as evidenced by the book sequel The lost World. Dinosaurs are dying out from a disease that is passed from scavenger to carnivore then to herbivores (thsoe who survive attacks are infected). I thought the plot was extremely thought out and Chricton deserves props for proposing the idea of dinosaur revival in a manner that seems scientifically feasable
|
As I pointed out;, even several years won't do it, you need decades. It is simply a matter of energy; growing is VERY energy consuming, as everyone who has kids will know. If your kids display an unusually extreme appetite in a certain evening, you will find they have grown by sometimes up to 2 cm (almost an inch) overnight next morning.. As to the dying out of the dinosaurs in one of the sequels: They couldn't have survived for a day without the proper environment!
Edited by BaldFriede - August 29 2007 at 02:58
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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1800iareyay
Prog Reviewer
Joined: November 18 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 2492
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Posted: August 29 2007 at 10:10 |
In the movie/book, ancient plants were somehow reproduced, though the oxygen levels propose a problem. At least he ensures they don't live long. It's a great read and a fun movie. It's no more farfetched than any other Crichton novel
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jimidom
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 02 2007
Location: Houston, TX USA
Status: Offline
Points: 570
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Posted: August 31 2007 at 12:03 |
How about a couple of great date movies?
Scanners
The Devils
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"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." - HST
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