SOLVED .Thank you very much So it was Sosruko from a caucasus myth
I start to believe the author sneak in one of their story among all other true myth. But that would be kind of unethical in a dictionary about myth aimed at children. I’m pretty sure, they gave the name of a land, since every myth was organized around the land they came from.
Plus the idea of throwing wheels to kill someone, is so random, I’m inclined to think it came from a real mythos.
still 20 years! Average USA lifespan for man is 75 year. He should already be dead by now.
Yes money help with living longer, but with his bad health hygiene it should cancel out.
that’s not the point, the point is it would be hilarious
Some women in Swiss were only allowed to vote in 1984.
Cleopatra is closer to us than she was from the great pyramid construction.
I watched it at release time. And the scene where Kevin Kostner run through his boat activating various sail and gadget to escape the bad guy is still engraved in my memory as the most badass thing ever. Was obsessed about the revelation of him having gills too.
All that because it was heavily inspired of one of my favorite Sci-fi series: The Pandora Sequence by F. Herbert (where the 2 last book are on a water planet, where human evolved for this world)
NB: the second book in the series was the source material for a more successful movie “Avatar” by Cameron. In the “Jesus incident” the planet is hostile to human, and there is a magical plant controlling it named “avata”… just to name a few similarity … they are endless
Waterworld (1995) with Kevin Kostner.
I unironically think it is a good movie. The theme are all from Frank Herbert dune. And it is a Mad Max on water.
but german is the most spoken language, so Scheize make sense
I mean, no revenge, sex, drug, money motive. May be for fame, like the ripper, if some of the letter are from him
bon c’est théo qui avait raison. Il est 80 millions plus riche… heureusement qu’il a pas écouté ton conseil de polkadot
Heu , le mec espere gagner 80 million d’ici une semaine. A 13k / jour, il lui faudrait 10 ans pour gagner la même somme. sans compter que ca sonne ridicule de miser sur un truc qui s’appele polkadot… en même temps miser sur trump, sonne pas trés malin non plus
but think about all the smart innovation from those brilliant billionaire brain you’ll be missing out on! And with 1.3 billion American less, that would be a lot less of trump supporters
For the few people who didn’t already watch it, and the best movie of all time :
Mad Max: Fury road (2015 ) by Miller .
This is what film story telling is about: having an entire weird universe told through visual medium. The 1st half hour has mad max gagged and incapable of talking, and it is amazing. Preferably on big screen.
A gem from the past:
Taboo(1999), by Nagisa Ôshima,
a samurai movie with hint of homosexuality. and an ending that can only be understood by paying close attention to the sound off screen.
A classic:
Seven samurai(1954), Kurosawa.
Just enjoy the black and white shot , and immerse in old Japanese culture
pourquoi?
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what is sad, is that for 10 perfect year between 1990 and 2000 we could believe that humanity was on its way to world peace…now we’re back to total annihilation program
She won a challenge doing a very funny impression of trump
The article is about Santino , a designer, and a former Judge on Rupaul drag race. The article didnt use any picture of Santino but one of the vivienne on the left, implying she is the one supporting Trump
It is an okay movie, with some flaws. Rain surge to ultra competence out of nowhere being indeed the most outrageous.
Here is my few thousand words theory about the movie:
In the film “Alien: Romulus,” the title purports (as in “Prometheus”) to reference the name of the ship. Yet, akin to “Prometheus”, it is a ruse. The film alludes to the tale of the two brothers from antiquity, Romulus and Remus. Let us recall this story, penned in 800 BC, which itself inspired the myth of Abel and Cain (with its earliest written traces dating back to 400 BC):
Romulus founds the city of Rome by plowing a furrow to mark the location of the new city’s walls. According to Roman legend (which favors Romulus, the founder of the capital), Remus mocks his brother and challenges him by leaping over the furrow. What might begin as an innocent jest between two brothers turns tragic: Romulus slays his brother Remus for this act. Romulus justifies his deed by declaring that no one shall ever breach the ramparts of Rome.
It is evident that Romulus is not the hero the Romans would have us believe. He is the killer, the villain, the Cain of the Jewish narrative.
In the film, which is a precise reiteration of Ridley Scott’s original “Alien,” it is more expedient to identify the differences between the two films than to find their similarities. There exists but a single distinction between them: there are two siblings.
Rain and her brother Andy.
Kay and her brother Tyler.
In the first “Alien” of 1979, the crew shares no familial ties. However, as in “Romulus,” they approach a vessel that has emitted a distress signal. They must explore this ship. The diverse crew (a mix of male and female, Spanish and English) does not get along. They must encounter the aliens. A facehugger attacks a crew member. A chestburster escapes from a human body. The heroine is clad in scant attire to emphasize her vulnerability in her struggle against the primary alien. An alien is ejected into space as the heroine screams, “Take that, you son of a bitch.” For, as in “Alien,” the heroine is a woman, and the sole survivor, while the men exhibit toxic masculinity and meet their demise.
Of course, the most significant commonality (and the key to the film’s true message) is the android Andy. While Rain is presented as the main character, there is no doubt that the true hero of the film is Andy. Rain has no reason to be so effective against the aliens. How can she conceive of utilizing the ship’s gravity when she is a “space virgin”? How does she wield a weapon when, unlike Tyler, she has never shown a passion for combat? How is she so resolute when the film’s beginning portrays her as ineffectual (to the extent that others assure her she will not have to leave the ship)?
Certainly, Rain is the heroine, for Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) was in the original “Alien.” Yet Ripley was a pilot, and the rest of the crew admired her worth at the film’s outset. Thus, when she acts with such determination, it does not come as a surprise, as it does with Rain. Andy, on the other hand, though initially depicted as weak, becomes competent with a mere change of programming. This is why the android in the film appears more credible than the suddenly indestructible Rain, who lacks explanation for her transformation.
The issue with Andy lies in his name. In the four preceding films of the series, the androids are named in alphabetical order: In the first film, “Alien,” the android is called Ash. In the second film, he is named Bishop. In the next, it is Call. In the previous film, “Prometheus,” he is called David (which presents another problem). Therefore, Andy should have a name beginning with an E, as he appears here in the fifth film of the series. In the film, Rook, the other android, refers to Andy by his construction designation N.D. Does the android’s name begin with an N? Is the film meant to be the 14th in the series? Unlikely. No! Andy begins with an “A” because he is the twin brother of Ash, the first android in the series.
Returning to the legend of Romulus and Remus, as in the legend, Andy kills a sister, Kay, by refusing to open the door for her to escape the alien. Similarly, Rain kills a brother, Tyler, when he rushes toward her and is struck from behind by the alien’s prehensile tail intended for Rain.
Two deaths that are more symbolic than real. The evidence: having endured an assault worse than her brother Tyler, Kay manages to reach the ship. Tyler should have survived. So should Kay, if she had not used the product developed by Weyland Industries. The deaths of a brother and sister at the hands of another brother and sister merely echo the film’s theme: to kill Remus.
For this is precisely what Alvarez attempts here. Like in the Roman legend, his film is the twin brother of the original “Alien” from 1979, replicating scene for scene the same narrative. Just as in the legend, “Alien: Romulus” claims to establish a new series, one superior to that which followed “Alien” in 1979. Like in the legend, “Alien: Romulus” seeks to slay its brother, “Alien: Remus” (1979). Alvarez hopes to rid himself of the entire legacy and strength of the original “Alien” by employing the symbolism of the Roman legend. As in the tale of Abel and Cain, “Alien: Romulus,” out of jealousy, attempts to kill the film that started it all. Undoubtedly, like in the legend, we are not deceived and take sides with the original “Alien.”
probably… or more drastically not having them on the same season