Don't you hate it when a director ties you to a chair and forces you to like a character that you wouldn't normally like under threat of violence and death?
Yeah, me either. Good thing that didn't happen, and all that you felt was empathy for someone other than yourself.
Ironically I actually enjoy a movie that can make me like the person I didn't expect to like in the beginning, and vice versa. Ex Machina was that way. Oscar Isaac seemed like a sociopathic Big Tech douchebag who played with people's emotions, and his employee was just a "normal" unassuming guy on a free vacation trying to live up to his boss's expectations, but if you've seen the movie you know it's a little more complicated than that.
Only a retarded feminist can come to such a dumb conclusion. Crazy how this is almost always the case when they have some of the most insane, most idiotic takes imaginable. I have never even entertained the though of feeling forced to like a character, if I like a character I usually wouldn't it just speaks for the writing of how great the character is, how well the author has made it to empathise with someone I usually couldn't.
This kind of story gets done a few times in Twilight Zone/Outer Limits type shows. Basic premise is always the same of "All men are dead, and woman rule the world", but it's never the actual utopia many idiots think it would be, even after solving any reproduction problems such a world would create.
In one version the guy who wakes up from cryo ends up being put back to sleep after causing an intertribal war, because despite being a "utopia", all the women in charge are still women and therefore passive-aggressive as fuck about doing anything. In another the guy gets killed but not before impregnating a woman with the first male baby in years.
In one version the guy who wakes up from cryo ends up being put back to sleep after causing an intertribal war, because despite being a "utopia",
If this is the one from Outer Limits that you're referring to, tribe A was also denying electricity to tribe B, which was causing them issues with food production, which tribe B was forced to give to tribe A.
I had high hopes for that one -- it had threads that could have gone the direction of, "see? Women are perfectly capable of exploiting each other as well." But instead the end was, "look, man bad. He caused war. It's perfectly acceptable for tribe B to have its food stolen for the Greater Good."
They're always dissapointing. They either go with the feminist schtick of eventually agreeing men are bad. Or they go for some diversion into comedy or "then they brought back the men" as if it's a surprise.
A society of all women is going to go one of 2 ways.
complete disfunction, starvation, barely able to keep things together because are always infighting, or...
half the women would start acting like men including violence, murder, etc
This movie is SHIT, with a few titty/fucky moments worth mentioning.
BUT... it has an epiphany moment that is underrated/missed by most people who watch this movie:
The top matriarch is ... A MAN.
For any feminist movement, the ultimate TRUE boss, is always a man (or men) with self serving ulterior motives. Women are just pawns following the narrative.
Ehh, I'll take it.
Don't you hate it when a director ties you to a chair and forces you to like a character that you wouldn't normally like under threat of violence and death?
Yeah, me either. Good thing that didn't happen, and all that you felt was empathy for someone other than yourself.
Ironically I actually enjoy a movie that can make me like the person I didn't expect to like in the beginning, and vice versa. Ex Machina was that way. Oscar Isaac seemed like a sociopathic Big Tech douchebag who played with people's emotions, and his employee was just a "normal" unassuming guy on a free vacation trying to live up to his boss's expectations, but if you've seen the movie you know it's a little more complicated than that.
that movie was so retarded I genuinely feel for anyone who wasted their life essence watching it.
Only a retarded feminist can come to such a dumb conclusion. Crazy how this is almost always the case when they have some of the most insane, most idiotic takes imaginable. I have never even entertained the though of feeling forced to like a character, if I like a character I usually wouldn't it just speaks for the writing of how great the character is, how well the author has made it to empathise with someone I usually couldn't.
This kind of story gets done a few times in Twilight Zone/Outer Limits type shows. Basic premise is always the same of "All men are dead, and woman rule the world", but it's never the actual utopia many idiots think it would be, even after solving any reproduction problems such a world would create.
In one version the guy who wakes up from cryo ends up being put back to sleep after causing an intertribal war, because despite being a "utopia", all the women in charge are still women and therefore passive-aggressive as fuck about doing anything. In another the guy gets killed but not before impregnating a woman with the first male baby in years.
If this is the one from Outer Limits that you're referring to, tribe A was also denying electricity to tribe B, which was causing them issues with food production, which tribe B was forced to give to tribe A.
I had high hopes for that one -- it had threads that could have gone the direction of, "see? Women are perfectly capable of exploiting each other as well." But instead the end was, "look, man bad. He caused war. It's perfectly acceptable for tribe B to have its food stolen for the Greater Good."
They're always dissapointing. They either go with the feminist schtick of eventually agreeing men are bad. Or they go for some diversion into comedy or "then they brought back the men" as if it's a surprise.
A society of all women is going to go one of 2 ways.
complete disfunction, starvation, barely able to keep things together because are always infighting, or...
half the women would start acting like men including violence, murder, etc
This movie is SHIT, with a few titty/fucky moments worth mentioning.
BUT... it has an epiphany moment that is underrated/missed by most people who watch this movie:
The top matriarch is ... A MAN.
For any feminist movement, the ultimate TRUE boss, is always a man (or men) with self serving ulterior motives. Women are just pawns following the narrative.
It is the same for feminism in the US.
how long is theimp banned for?
You can ask him here. I don't recall if the suspension was 90 days or six months.
That says a lot about US culture. Country has been screwed for a while now.