The guy just probably hasn't watched enough fictional crime drama television to know the rules of what or what not to do as a fictional low-level criminal gopher.
I didn't understand the ending to Uncut Gems (2019)
Not to "overthink" things again but movies and TV have given us all an unrealistic view of fingerprinting and DNA. I think it's actually quite unlikely to get a good print, the suspect has to touch glass or have something on their hands to cause a print, like blood or paint etc. Most surfaces you can't actually get a fingerprint.
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User Lists
Hard (but respectful) disagree! Thought Sandler was great. It's a version of his angry characters, sort of the same way his character in Punch-Drunk Love was, but there's a lot more going on there. It's an admittedly fine distinction, in the sense that Anthony Hopkins could play another sophisticated serial killer and we'd all have a hard time not just thinking of it as him rehashing Hannibal.
Honestly don't understand this. It goes everywhere. It's positively breakneck.
That's not what a morality play is, though. A morality play exists to teach a lesson, not to give you someone to root for.
That's exactly why. The entire movie, that particular thug gets angrier and angrier, is antagonized more and more. And the fact that he's a hired thug means he's a mercenary, so at a certain point he decides it's better to just kill everyone and take what's there.
But, if you don't buy that, that's the morality play part: the universe (the one inside that little gem, no less) punishes Howie for his refusal to learn. The last moment to save himself is when he's hovering over that button on the phone, when he knows he can call Julia and pay off his debt and get on with his life, and he chooses to let it ride anyway. That shows he'll never learn, never change, and that's why he dies.
Eh, people who are superficially "out of each other's leagues" get together all the time, especially when issues of power and money are involved. Not that weird.
Honestly don't understand this. It goes everywhere. It's positively breakneck.
That's not what a morality play is, though. A morality play exists to teach a lesson, not to give you someone to root for.
That's exactly why. The entire movie, that particular thug gets angrier and angrier, is antagonized more and more. And the fact that he's a hired thug means he's a mercenary, so at a certain point he decides it's better to just kill everyone and take what's there.
But, if you don't buy that, that's the morality play part: the universe (the one inside that little gem, no less) punishes Howie for his refusal to learn. The last moment to save himself is when he's hovering over that button on the phone, when he knows he can call Julia and pay off his debt and get on with his life, and he chooses to let it ride anyway. That shows he'll never learn, never change, and that's why he dies.
Eh, people who are superficially "out of each other's leagues" get together all the time, especially when issues of power and money are involved. Not that weird.
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"Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn"
"I need your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle"
"Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn"
"I need your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle"
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I couldn't finish this one because it just stressed me way out. I'd like to finish it but I just don't know if I can. I imagine if I ever do, it will then sit with The Road and Children of Men of pretty great movies that I'll never watch again because of the anxiety they induce.
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Favorite Movies
While the thread is being bumped, I guess I have to ask. Who hasn't gotten so angry you just have to punch a tree to get it out? Drop the mobile between the driver seat and center console? Welp, there's a good tree so ima pull on over and punch it. Walk into the office and see your personal "meow" pun coffee mug on a co-worker's desk as if it's not obviously your mug? Heck. There's a tree outside. Pay it a visit or two. On a conference call with a client and your boss keeps repeating, word for word, what the client just said but then adding a question mark at the end because he isn't paying attention making the staff look like morons? Can't punch a tree at the moment, but you can dream about it to get you through the call.
Look. I'm just saying people do things.
And that's OK.
Look. I'm just saying people do things.
And that's OK.
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"My Dionne Warwick understanding of your dream indicates that you are ambivalent on how you want life to eventually screw you." - Joel
"Ever try to forcibly pin down a house cat? It's not easy." - Captain Steel
"I just can't get pass sticking a finger up a dog's butt." - John Dumbear
"My Dionne Warwick understanding of your dream indicates that you are ambivalent on how you want life to eventually screw you." - Joel
"Ever try to forcibly pin down a house cat? It's not easy." - Captain Steel
"I just can't get pass sticking a finger up a dog's butt." - John Dumbear
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Favorite Movies
While the thread is being bumped, I guess I have to ask. Who hasn't gotten so angry you just have to punch a tree to get it out? Drop the mobile between the driver seat and center console? Welp, there's a good tree so ima pull on over and punch it. Walk into the office and see your personal "meow" pun coffee mug on a co-worker's desk as if it's not obviously your mug? Heck. There's a tree outside. Pay it a visit or two. On a conference call with a client and your boss keeps repeating, word for word, what the client just said but then adding a question mark at the end because he isn't paying attention making the staff look like morons? Can't punch a tree at the moment, but you can dream about it to get you through the call.
Look. I'm just saying people do things.
And that's OK.
Look. I'm just saying people do things.
And that's OK.
Also, see The Ruins. Also the trees from the LoTR trilogy. Ok maybe not them.
Don’t mess with nature is all I’m saying
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