craftyindividual 23h ago • 66%
Heh, on the contrary they may well have had a terrible life but this the only break they've had from it ;)
craftyindividual 23h ago • 100%
Mine too, at the airport.
craftyindividual 1d ago • 100%
I can't believe I never thought any of it through. A real headache in a packet. Still love the film though in parts.
craftyindividual 1d ago • 100%
Gotcha! I always felt it wasn't quite right but you found the problem. If the injuries appear the memories of the injury and associate eventually would have to be there, but mainly he'd be dead already... crazy logic.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
Pawse...Breaking Bear?
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
The trouble with tribbles, the revenge!
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
Many years ago I read an article by an Iranian gentleman that basically highlighted that torture doesn't get the answers required, it harms both the sufferer and the person inflicting pain on a deep level. This also brings to mind the prevalence of torture in the early series of "24"... a problem later addressed by the producers when they actively avoided depiction of torture. In the early Obama presidency there was a lot of (over due) contrition over the use of enhanced interrogation at Guantanamo bay. Arguements for the use of torture were often given in the context of a "ticking time bomb" or equivalent scenario that needed to be stopped in a given time limit, despite such incidents not having a real life precedent.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
Also you get a sense of the terror inflicted by waterboarding.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
I used to think I'd hold out well under torture until I had gastroscopy without anaesthetic. It was like being attacked by the alien facehugger. A rigid metal tube down the esophagus provoking the suffocation reflex (despite airflow to lungs) for 5mins which felt like 5 weeks. I was an absolute mess until they gave me nitrous gas for the colonoscopy, then it was relatively painless intoxication.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
They really captured the shape with minimum effort
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
For Achilles, time wounds all heels.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
When he toasts a glass at dinner he probably says "up bottoms"!
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
It's all good. It's a free country. Gotta break you to make you.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 87%
Frustrated they never showed the polar bears backstory including his work as a scientist with a gambling problem and a fractured relationship with his son.
craftyindividual 2d ago • 100%
To clarify, do you mean it wouldn't make sense that his body part would dissapear as they were severed in an alternative past. Or do you mean it doesn't belong on the plot/add to the story?
craftyindividual 3d ago • 100%
Ignore the neigh sayers!
craftyindividual 3d ago • 100%
Hey it's that horse from Arrested Development, Lego Batman and BoJack!
craftyindividual 4d ago • 100%
Nautilus is happy too, just deeper down.
craftyindividual 4d ago • 100%
Dehumidifier - 5 years and counting drying laundry indoors overnight with no risk of rain or wind!
craftyindividual 4d ago • 100%
Colonoscopy was a walk in the park compared to the gastroscopy tube. That hard metal thingy made me feel like victim of the Alien.
Ambrose Vollard was a French art dealer who is regarded as one of the most important dealers in French contemporary art at the beginning of the twentieth century. He is credited with being a major supporter and champion of the contemporary artists of his period, providing exposure and emotional support to numerous then-unknown artists, including Paul Cézanne, Aristide Maillol, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Louis Valtat, Pablo Picasso, André Derain, Georges Rouault, Paul Gauguin, and Vincent van Gogh.
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