"emptybowl" <fake@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> a écrit dans le message de news:
Xns9A8BA82D8D220octopaganinigmailcom@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> robgood@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote in
> news:2c6a2877-6d06-4ab6-9b86-a6305d5830c4@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> And I suppose the only way you can think of indicating the passage of
>> time on TV is to actually show it pass in real time.
>
> No, but why waste time? Keep the viewer interested.
>
>> By horsemen hoping to capture a polar bear for their collection? What
>> do you think has been coming thru there that brigands would want to
>> intercept?
>
> Interlopers who have also tele****ted to the same spot that Ben and the
> polar bear have previously? They didn't look to happy to see Ben,
> regardless of where he came from.
>
>> Must've been a visual that lasted for hours and ended just as the
>> scene opened, to get them way out there.
>
> How do we know how far away the were when ben awoke? Maybe they were
> riding by and saw ben arrive.
>
> I still feel this is moot, because, really, it's just a ****ing story
> device, but how about this: Weird **** happens, and people sometimes
> coincidentally show up just in time to see it. IT HAPPENS. Car
> accidents, frozen toilet waste falling from the sky,
Like in Six feet under ? (It's arguably one of the best death sequences of
the series.)
> meteors...need I go
> on. Not everything coincidental indicates conspirsacy
>
>> And he would of course wish the desk clerk to know of his unsureness,
>> because he absolutely positively has to know that very minute?
>
> Okay, forget for a moment that you're a nimrod that believes this stupid
> conspiracy bull****. Please to be indicating a better way to indicate 1)
> the date to the viewer and 2) the fact that Ben needs to know it because
> he is unsure.
>
> I mean, what are you gonna do? Have him look at a calendar/paper and
> have him mutter "Man, I'm glad I looked at that, seein as how I was
> unsure of the date!" That's ****y writing.
>
>> Hell, they used a subtitle, "Sahara Desert", and then one for a
>> location in Tunisia. They didn't have Benry ask WHERE he was.
>
> Because he's been there before? The woman at the counter asked if he had
> been to the hotel before, and he indicated he had, but not for a while.
>
>
>> He was injured and disheveled, asked a very strange question (even
>> perseverated on it), and was probably caught on security video.
>
> Yeah, no one emerging from the Sahara desert is dirty and disheveled!
> They're usually dressed in top hat and tails! Regardless of your dumb
> argument, I'd still hardly called what happeend "making a scene". Jack
> at the air****t desk yelling at a poor woman? Making a scene. Quietly
> asking a slightly strange question to one person with no one around? Not
> making a scene.
>
>


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