There's the reverse to Mott's Law, though, in that I don't want to analyze a movie (or TV show) and I resent Hubby when he insists on taking something I quite enjoyed and saying, "You know, it really wouldn't have worked that way, they should have done thus-and-so." I get a definite feeling of "OK, you have had your shallow enjoyment, now I need to show you how that movie wasn't all that and you're willfully turning off your brain to be getting so much pleasure out of it."
Joyce ,'Never Leave Me'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Showing up on a web site where a movie is being discussed and asking people to stop thinking about what they're talking about is an exercise in willful obstinacy.
I can pick a movie apart and still enjoy it. For instance: why didn't they just ride the eagles to Mount Doom?
For instance: why didn't they just ride the eagles to Mount Doom?
Yeah, that occurred to me too.
why didn't they just ride the eagles to Mount Doom?
THANK YOU!!!
Because then all the fanboys would have killed Mr. Jackson? That's a question for JRR, not Peter.
I can pick a movie apart and still enjoy it. For instance: why didn't they just ride the eagles to Mount Doom?
Wasn't there a cartoon or YouTube thing about that very question?
same reason the bad guys just never shot Bond in the head. that wouldn't be much of a story, would it?
In terms of Werewolves as victims, yeah that is mostly true since Hollywood. (I've been told the whole mythology we are familiar with is pretty much a Hollywood invention - transmission by bite and so on. Shape-changing could be a curse. Wottisname in Greek mythology was turned into a wolf as punishment for something pretty awful - umm serving someone his own son in a stew so some such? But a lot of shapechangers (including lycnathracopes) were voluntary skin changers. Witches or people who owned a charmed skin of whatever animal they wanted to change into. I also remember a Victorian story in which a family of werewolves were actually a kind of undead. They were apparently buried without a proper service. They took human or wolf form at will, but were ultimately laid to rest by reading a proper Church of England burial service over their graves. Pretty sure the author made that one up, but who knows? The Church of England has been around enough for it to be incorporated into folk superstitions.
same reason the bad guys just never shot bond in the head. that wouldn't be much of a story, would it?
It was when the Simpsons did it.
(Which is why it was so funny.)
OK, the Bond thing wasn't really the story on that Simpsons EP....