Honestly Home Cooked are the best And I would say movies like Winter Soldier, Top Gun 2 or Terminator 2 are the perfect balance between Fast Food and Home Cooked, while movies like Arrival and Kurosawa's are in the middle of Home Cooked and Fine Dining Robocop would also be home cooked for me, John Wick too...maybe leaning towards fast food but its too well done
There's often a softening of the expression, representing a humility in accepting they had lost. The villains that didn't do that were truly evil to the end.
*The moment a villain realizes they lost.* These are good moments to have in your stories, but if done incorrectly, can it make your villain not memorable, but seem lame, having a villain like Thanos, never truly lose, truly makes him all the more menacing, , ( his ending in endgame was still done correctly, 'fore he never really truly lost, they snapped him into dust, he was an unbeatable villain) Most people think that the ending of villains like Kang the conqueror defeated by gigantic ants was Lame, because he was built up to be an unbeatable villain, but only to be defeated by ants... A good example of a villain's death is the death of The goblin in Spider-Man, (seemingly an unstoppable villain) but in the end died by his own glider, (which isn't an embarrassing/lame ending for a villain, but an ending that mirrors the flaws in the character itself) - Stewart Nibroc
Tbh I usually don’t like the scenes where the villain loses because half the time the villain is my favourite character and the other half the time i just don’t know/ can’t choose which is my favourite.(btw i just spent about 5 minutes designing what I should reply to your comment with manly because I couldn’t choose a scene) ( and yes that bit in brackets also took about 2 minutes)
The audacity one must have to presume to be able to sum up the whole country in one word as a foreigner, and then decide on one movie, as a foreigner no less.
As I'm typing this, this channel has 133 subscribers I subscribed yesterday. _I can't wait till I'm one of the millions_ *Thank you for creating this amazing content! Something that (as I'm typing this) the world truly lacks...*
Can you extrapolate this Metaphor to other 'Periods' of Hollywood History? Such as when Film was emerging before Genre's and 'understandings' of The Blockbuster, Art Movie, and Middle Ground or Fast Food, Fine, and Home Cooked, came to be or we're 'still evolving' as Concepts for Cinematic Direction? Like I dunno... The Golden Age of Hollywood, The Immediate Period After US V.S. Paramount Pictures and the Rise of Indies, or the Public Domain's Film Catalog from...well the Dawn of Cinema to 1928 going on 1929 in a Year? And what exactly 'that' would look like?
50 percent of Fast Food 50 percent of Fine Dining 50 percent of Homecooked Edit: Just kidding 😂 It's actually 15 percent of Fast Food 20 percent of Fine Dining 15 percent of Homecooked
I tend to watch fine dining once a year during oscar season to expand my palate and then balance the rest of the year with block busters and home cooked meals. So id say 40 block buster 40 home cooked and 20 fine dining
It is a good list. But"Rome" do not show only this side of extended family in mexico and other developing countries. It also show how the serventes will never be valorized the same way that they can value their employees.
What a perfect explanation of cinema. 35% homecooked, 35% Fine dining, 30% fast food. Fast food often takes the place of generic cultural relevance so i feel its more relevant than most cinephiles give it credit for.
I would say stuff like Transformers movies, Disney movies, Superhero movies, Star Wars, most Comedy movies are more Chocolate/Sweets. Stuff like Action movies, Sci-fi movies, Disaster movies, are more McDonald’s/Burger King etc etc.
When it comes to movies I’m mostly home cooked, but I do like some fast food or fine dining every now and then. I can be classy and trashy, I’m not a snob, if I like a movie I like a movie.
My taste in dining matches my taste in film. Hate: fast food and fine dining Love: home cooked meals and mid-range/non-chain restaurants (especially when they serve interesting takes on fast food)
@dr.dark2988 I'll have to see it; I hear it's refunding to general audiences, like Joker 2 Folie A Deus is. I'm detecting a pattern of confusion in these "global movies". Maybe confused is the best representation of this mixed up, muddled up world?
My father grew up in very German Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and raised me in the 1980s to be proud of my German-ness. Decades later, when I first saw Run Lola Run, it hit me like no other! I immediately told my father about it, told him he had to see it! His by then Americanized response: "meh, there's lots of movies." Yeah but Run Lola Run is special! I wanted to cry out, but didn't. It hurt, the loss of his German-ness that he had raised me with. Coming of age, losing one's culture, in the melting pot of America.
Maybe on another video I will make a series about the worst trait of a country and the movie that best exemplify this. And Idiocracy might be one of my first choices for America as well.