They're the size of skyscrapers and they mostly just stomp on stuff without eating
I understand it wouldn't be fun if Godzilla died of starvation halfway through the movie but come on movie makers at least explain it
Like what if the giant monster grows giant masses of flesh in it's stomach and eats that or something
Actually, godzilla is a nuclear organism, and the radioactive elements inside it power it's cells, like a plant collecting sunlight, but much more efficient and powerful. Since its somehow sustaining nuclear fission, somehow it fan barf it up in some sort of hyperbeam? Idk, i know there is an explanation for that specific thing though.
I want to know how they appear out of nowhere. Remember Cloverfield? How the heck do you lose a twenty story tall monster that drops little baby monsters? Even in a city, that's just stupid. You would be able to hear every single bodily function within a mile radius of the sucker. Every breath it takes, every step it takes, every time it gut redistributes anything, and it has to use the restroom at some point! Imagine the bomb sized farts. Literally, it would be a massive amount of noise constantly! You could never lose it!
Bump. (This is a great thread to read through, I'd like to see it live on for a few more months or so.)
Does anyone else get bugged by families in movies that act like total jerks to each other? I get that an affectionate family would be out-of-place in a movie meant for an older audience, and that a boring family might not feel too realistic, but my personal experience is that normally siblings don't get away with swearing at each other. (80's movies are the biggest example of this, especially Home Alone, the subplot of which is that he realizes how much he really does care about his family.)
Other than that, the fact that most modern superhero movies were PG-13 and full of self-serving heroes made me completely disregard any kind of Marvel or DC years ago, nowadays I can at least enjoy the 90's marvel cartoons. (I don't know if the comics were PG-13 or not, but from the 90's to the 2000's, superheroes on TV went from all-ages to dark and innuendous. I think I just invented a new word...)
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
My avatar is a texture from a small block game I made in Python. It's not very good and it probably won't work if you install it.
I'm very alone in my Minecraft worlds as I don't have a very good internet connection to run a server. If you're like me, you might be interested in my Posse mod suggestion.
Bump. (This is a great thread to read through, I'd like to see it live on for a few more months or so.)
Does anyone else get bugged by families in movies that act like total jerks to each other? I get that an affectionate family would be out-of-place in a movie meant for an older audience, and that a boring family might not feel too realistic, but my personal experience is that normally siblings don't get away with swearing at each other.
Depends on how tired the parents are, and if the parents are there. Speaking from experience.
OT: I'm sure this has been mentioned before, but hacking. "oooo, numbers flying across a command prompt window and boom, I just casually hacked the CIA, yay me!"
And honestly, when someone "Deduces" something in a movie, half the time it's the protagonist making weird connections between almost unrelated events, yet somehow, he figures out who the bad guy is.
Some goes for ridiculously elaborate plans. Looking at you, Furious 8.
OT: I'm sure this has been mentioned before, but hacking. "oooo, numbers flying across a command prompt window and boom, I just casually hacked the CIA, yay me!"
It just starts getting cringy when action writers try to write a script about people hacking, and all they can think of is, "Make them type faster!".
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
My avatar is a texture from a small block game I made in Python. It's not very good and it probably won't work if you install it.
I'm very alone in my Minecraft worlds as I don't have a very good internet connection to run a server. If you're like me, you might be interested in my Posse mod suggestion.
Bump. (This is a great thread to read through, I'd like to see it live on for a few more months or so.)
Does anyone else get bugged by families in movies that act like total jerks to each other? I get that an affectionate family would be out-of-place in a movie meant for an older audience, and that a boring family might not feel too realistic, but my personal experience is that normally siblings don't get away with swearing at each other. (80's movies are the biggest example of this, especially Home Alone, the subplot of which is that he realizes how much he really does care about his family.)
Other than that, the fact that most modern superhero movies were PG-13 and full of self-serving heroes made me completely disregard any kind of Marvel or DC years ago, nowadays I can at least enjoy the 90's marvel cartoons. (I don't know if the comics were PG-13 or not, but from the 90's to the 2000's, superheroes on TV went from all-ages to dark and innuendous. I think I just invented a new word...)
I just watched the Back To The Future Trilogy a few months ago, and I was surprised at how much they cussed. It is PG and has more language than most most PG-13 movies today.
As per superhero movies, Spiderman: Homecoming was pretty good. It was a bit dark at times, but for the most part was a breath of fresh air among super hero movies, seeing that it was not about a night-stalking vigilante who is borderline evil.
As per superhero movies, Spiderman: Homecoming was pretty good. It was a bit dark at times, but for the most part was a breath of fresh air among super hero movies, seeing that it was not about a night-stalking vigilante who is borderline evil.
What? Batman?
"I'm Batman."
That's the allure of Batman though. At what point do you need to cross the morally grey line?
The Dark Knight was a pretty good example of this. If you read comics, the Killing Joke and Batman Earth One illustrated this fairly well.
Another thing:
How do giant monsters in movies get enough to eat
They're the size of skyscrapers and they mostly just stomp on stuff without eating
I understand it wouldn't be fun if Godzilla died of starvation halfway through the movie but come on movie makers at least explain it
Like what if the giant monster grows giant masses of flesh in it's stomach and eats that or something
http://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/off-topic/forum-games/2862232-indestructible-box
This is my forum game, play it
Actually, godzilla is a nuclear organism, and the radioactive elements inside it power it's cells, like a plant collecting sunlight, but much more efficient and powerful. Since its somehow sustaining nuclear fission, somehow it fan barf it up in some sort of hyperbeam? Idk, i know there is an explanation for that specific thing though.
I want to know how they appear out of nowhere. Remember Cloverfield? How the heck do you lose a twenty story tall monster that drops little baby monsters? Even in a city, that's just stupid. You would be able to hear every single bodily function within a mile radius of the sucker. Every breath it takes, every step it takes, every time it gut redistributes anything, and it has to use the restroom at some point! Imagine the bomb sized farts. Literally, it would be a massive amount of noise constantly! You could never lose it!
Bump. (This is a great thread to read through, I'd like to see it live on for a few more months or so.)
Does anyone else get bugged by families in movies that act like total jerks to each other? I get that an affectionate family would be out-of-place in a movie meant for an older audience, and that a boring family might not feel too realistic, but my personal experience is that normally siblings don't get away with swearing at each other. (80's movies are the biggest example of this, especially Home Alone, the subplot of which is that he realizes how much he really does care about his family.)
Other than that, the fact that most modern superhero movies were PG-13 and full of self-serving heroes made me completely disregard any kind of Marvel or DC years ago, nowadays I can at least enjoy the 90's marvel cartoons. (I don't know if the comics were PG-13 or not, but from the 90's to the 2000's, superheroes on TV went from all-ages to dark and innuendous. I think I just invented a new word...)
My avatar is a texture from a small block game I made in Python. It's not very good and it probably won't work if you install it.
I'm very alone in my Minecraft worlds as I don't have a very good internet connection to run a server. If you're like me, you might be interested in my Posse mod suggestion.
Depends on how tired the parents are, and if the parents are there. Speaking from experience.
OT: I'm sure this has been mentioned before, but hacking. "oooo, numbers flying across a command prompt window and boom, I just casually hacked the CIA, yay me!"
And honestly, when someone "Deduces" something in a movie, half the time it's the protagonist making weird connections between almost unrelated events, yet somehow, he figures out who the bad guy is.
Some goes for ridiculously elaborate plans. Looking at you, Furious 8.
It just starts getting cringy when action writers try to write a script about people hacking, and all they can think of is, "Make them type faster!".
My avatar is a texture from a small block game I made in Python. It's not very good and it probably won't work if you install it.
I'm very alone in my Minecraft worlds as I don't have a very good internet connection to run a server. If you're like me, you might be interested in my Posse mod suggestion.
I just watched the Back To The Future Trilogy a few months ago, and I was surprised at how much they cussed. It is PG and has more language than most most PG-13 movies today.
As per superhero movies, Spiderman: Homecoming was pretty good. It was a bit dark at times, but for the most part was a breath of fresh air among super hero movies, seeing that it was not about a night-stalking vigilante who is borderline evil.
What? Batman?
"I'm Batman."
That's the allure of Batman though. At what point do you need to cross the morally grey line?
The Dark Knight was a pretty good example of this. If you read comics, the Killing Joke and Batman Earth One illustrated this fairly well.