I wonder how much Andy Garcia was paid for his role.
imjustsayin said:
I wonder how much Andy Garcia was paid for his role.
BassCowboy33 said:imjustsayin said:
I wonder how much Andy Garcia was paid for his role.
SPOILER
I read that the ending was the hardest part of the script for them to film. They actually filmed multiple endings and one of them was Garcia wandering around the vessel looking at the remnants of the previous 90 years. It was supposed to be a decent cameo, but at the end of the day, they decided against using it.
Would you recommend seeing it, or is it too vanilla?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
aggiesq said:
Vanilla is a really good description for this movie. Not bad (though there were certainly some acting moments and lines that make me think "wow, thats bad") and not great (though there were maybe 2 moments of "wow, thats great").
i thought the bartender was the best actor.
We're really glad we saw it now on a big screen. The Avalon sets and visual effects are impressive. I thought it was worth the ticket, certainly.TCTTS said:
Honestly, I would wait for streaming.
Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
I thought that was a very smart addition too. Moreover, Jim could have stayed silent and kept the Autodoc's capabilities to himself, but didn't. There's some redemption in that.TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.
I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.
Jim's and Gus' pod malfunctions were caused by the cascading system failures, which were getting so frequent and critical that the loss of the ship and 5,255 other innocent people was certain. If Aurora had refused to help Jim save the ship, would she not be an even bigger monster than Jim?Ag Since 83 said:I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.
If Jim had stayed dead, Aurora would have been doomed to 88 years of solitude. How is that a happy ending for her? Maybe after a year or two of loneliness, she makes the same choice and wakes up someone else. Would that be preferable?Quote:
If Jim had actually stayed dead (which if the story had made any sense he would have), maybe it would have been somewhat redeeming, but the movie instead wants you to root for a happy ending for him, which is just ridiculous.
That's a legitimate criticism; it was discussed earlier in the thread before the movie released. But recall that it took an asteroid hit that punctured the ship and damaged the reactor, eventually leading to multiple system failures before overwhelming the damage control systems, to lead to two pod failures.Quote:
Not to mention how stupid the premise of the movie is to begin with: this company has made thousands of flights without any back up systems in case of pod failure? Tons of robots, but none with the capability of diagnosing and reparing the ship? No emergency "wake up the crew" procedure if something goes wrong? And yet, all the computers to entertain the guests who aren't even supposed to be awake for nearly a century are on and acting like all is normal.
G Martin 87 said:Jim's and Gus' pod malfunctions were caused by the cascading system failures, which were getting so frequent and critical that the loss of the ship and 5,255 other innocent people was certain. If Aurora had refused to help Jim save the ship, would she not be an even bigger monster than Jim?Ag Since 83 said:I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.If Jim had stayed dead, Aurora would have been doomed to 88 years of solitude. How is that a happy ending for her? Maybe after a year or two of loneliness, she makes the same choice and wakes up someone else. Would that be preferable?Quote:
If Jim had actually stayed dead (which if the story had made any sense he would have), maybe it would have been somewhat redeeming, but the movie instead wants you to root for a happy ending for him, which is just ridiculous.That's a legitimate criticism; it was discussed earlier in the thread before the movie released. But recall that it took an asteroid hit that punctured the ship and damaged the reactor, eventually leading to multiple system failures before overwhelming the damage control systems, to lead to two pod failures.Quote:
Not to mention how stupid the premise of the movie is to begin with: this company has made thousands of flights without any back up systems in case of pod failure? Tons of robots, but none with the capability of diagnosing and reparing the ship? No emergency "wake up the crew" procedure if something goes wrong? And yet, all the computers to entertain the guests who aren't even supposed to be awake for nearly a century are on and acting like all is normal.
that explains why they only had 1 of those on a ship with 5000 people.TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.
1. My point is rather than have her actually decide to forgive him (part of this supposedly brilliant moral dilemma this movie is) they instead put her in a position where her emotions don't actually matter, she has to participate in an action movie All the questions about morality or put aside for a run of the mill blockbuster endingG Martin 87 said:Jim's and Gus' pod malfunctions were caused by the cascading system failures, which were getting so frequent and critical that the loss of the ship and 5,255 other innocent people was certain. If Aurora had refused to help Jim save the ship, would she not be an even bigger monster than Jim?Ag Since 83 said:I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.If Jim had stayed dead, Aurora would have been doomed to 88 years of solitude. How is that a happy ending for her? Maybe after a year or two of loneliness, she makes the same choice and wakes up someone else. Would that be preferable?Quote:
If Jim had actually stayed dead (which if the story had made any sense he would have), maybe it would have been somewhat redeeming, but the movie instead wants you to root for a happy ending for him, which is just ridiculous.That's a legitimate criticism; it was discussed earlier in the thread before the movie released. But recall that it took an asteroid hit that punctured the ship and damaged the reactor, eventually leading to multiple system failures before overwhelming the damage control systems, to lead to two pod failures.Quote:
Not to mention how stupid the premise of the movie is to begin with: this company has made thousands of flights without any back up systems in case of pod failure? Tons of robots, but none with the capability of diagnosing and reparing the ship? No emergency "wake up the crew" procedure if something goes wrong? And yet, all the computers to entertain the guests who aren't even supposed to be awake for nearly a century are on and acting like all is normal.
TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
Ag Since 83 said:1. My point is rather than have her actually decide to forgive him (part of this supposedly brilliant moral dilemma this movie is) they instead put her in a position where her emotions don't actually matter, she has to participate in an action movie All the questions about morality or put aside for a run of the mill blockbuster endingG Martin 87 said:Jim's and Gus' pod malfunctions were caused by the cascading system failures, which were getting so frequent and critical that the loss of the ship and 5,255 other innocent people was certain. If Aurora had refused to help Jim save the ship, would she not be an even bigger monster than Jim?Ag Since 83 said:I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.If Jim had stayed dead, Aurora would have been doomed to 88 years of solitude. How is that a happy ending for her? Maybe after a year or two of loneliness, she makes the same choice and wakes up someone else. Would that be preferable?Quote:
If Jim had actually stayed dead (which if the story had made any sense he would have), maybe it would have been somewhat redeeming, but the movie instead wants you to root for a happy ending for him, which is just ridiculous.That's a legitimate criticism; it was discussed earlier in the thread before the movie released. But recall that it took an asteroid hit that punctured the ship and damaged the reactor, eventually leading to multiple system failures before overwhelming the damage control systems, to lead to two pod failures.Quote:
Not to mention how stupid the premise of the movie is to begin with: this company has made thousands of flights without any back up systems in case of pod failure? Tons of robots, but none with the capability of diagnosing and reparing the ship? No emergency "wake up the crew" procedure if something goes wrong? And yet, all the computers to entertain the guests who aren't even supposed to be awake for nearly a century are on and acting like all is normal.
2. Again, if this story is actually about morality, maybe it's not supposed to have a happy ending? Maybe he dies and she tragically lives out her days, maybe she does the same thing he did, maybe she agrees and gets in the medical pod (as someone else said...only 1? another dumb thing about this ship). Instead, they did exactly what so many critics have pointed out: turn it into an action flick where everything works out for the hot guy as long as he does some manly things.
3. I don't remember them saying if the asteroid is what made everything turn on. I thought they said it started with one small thing...one pod coming malfunctioning, as if the machines being on was normal.
I will say this: the best scene in the movie was when she went into his bedroom and beat the **** out of him. That part of the movie should have been longer. They showed the anger, but she also should have been afraid of him. She should have been carrying a knife around as he stalked her around the ship...instead they just agreed joint custody of the bartender
I'm a bit behind on this thread, so apologies if this has already been mentioned. Here's what I took away from that bit as well:Zombie Jon Snow said:Ag Since 83 said:1. My point is rather than have her actually decide to forgive him (part of this supposedly brilliant moral dilemma this movie is) they instead put her in a position where her emotions don't actually matter, she has to participate in an action movie All the questions about morality or put aside for a run of the mill blockbuster endingG Martin 87 said:Jim's and Gus' pod malfunctions were caused by the cascading system failures, which were getting so frequent and critical that the loss of the ship and 5,255 other innocent people was certain. If Aurora had refused to help Jim save the ship, would she not be an even bigger monster than Jim?Ag Since 83 said:I disagree. The entire movie did not question the choice. It questioned it for a bit, but then it descended into a generic "gotta save the day" popcorn flick. They made it so that Aurora had to work with him rather than choose to. Additionally, they have LF show up just long enough to excuse Jim's behavior (and provide the information they needed of course).TCTTS said:A bunch of critics, feminists, and feminist critics freaked out about the plot, one built around Pratt's character - a man - taking away the "agency" of Lawrence's character, a woman. And worse yet, he not only gets away with it, and she not only forgives him, but by the end of the movie she's more in love with him than ever. A lot of people were "disgusted" by that. One prominent female critic even kept saying Pratt's character "murdered" Lawrence's character and said she's never been more aghast at the end of a movie.Ag Since 83 said:Honest question: What exactly are you referring to as "tasteful" and "level-headed"?TCTTS said:
Finally saw it with the family tonight. Not nearly as bad as the critics are making it out to be, but man, it was about the most vanilla version of the script they could have possibly made. Just so incredibly generic on every level. We got the Wal-Mart version of Passengers. I at least wanted the Target version, if not the made-with-love mom & pop version.
Oh, and **** the feminists. Given the scenario, the filmmakers bent over backwards to handle the issue in a tasteful and level-headed way. I mean, I guess I understand their complaints on a basic, knee-jerk level, but good gosh, people are freaking out over that? Get a life.
But one thing that wasn't in the script, that they added in the final version, was Pratt's character giving Lawrence's character the choice to once again go back into cryo sleep, which I thought was a really nice touch. I'm sure some will complain that it's not a man's place to be the one giving her that choice, but whatever. Point is, between that and, you know, the ENTIRE MOVIE questioning the horrible moral choice Pratt's character made, I truly do not see what all the fuss is about.If Jim had stayed dead, Aurora would have been doomed to 88 years of solitude. How is that a happy ending for her? Maybe after a year or two of loneliness, she makes the same choice and wakes up someone else. Would that be preferable?Quote:
If Jim had actually stayed dead (which if the story had made any sense he would have), maybe it would have been somewhat redeeming, but the movie instead wants you to root for a happy ending for him, which is just ridiculous.That's a legitimate criticism; it was discussed earlier in the thread before the movie released. But recall that it took an asteroid hit that punctured the ship and damaged the reactor, eventually leading to multiple system failures before overwhelming the damage control systems, to lead to two pod failures.Quote:
Not to mention how stupid the premise of the movie is to begin with: this company has made thousands of flights without any back up systems in case of pod failure? Tons of robots, but none with the capability of diagnosing and reparing the ship? No emergency "wake up the crew" procedure if something goes wrong? And yet, all the computers to entertain the guests who aren't even supposed to be awake for nearly a century are on and acting like all is normal.
2. Again, if this story is actually about morality, maybe it's not supposed to have a happy ending? Maybe he dies and she tragically lives out her days, maybe she does the same thing he did, maybe she agrees and gets in the medical pod (as someone else said...only 1? another dumb thing about this ship). Instead, they did exactly what so many critics have pointed out: turn it into an action flick where everything works out for the hot guy as long as he does some manly things.
3. I don't remember them saying if the asteroid is what made everything turn on. I thought they said it started with one small thing...one pod coming malfunctioning, as if the machines being on was normal.
I will say this: the best scene in the movie was when she went into his bedroom and beat the **** out of him. That part of the movie should have been longer. They showed the anger, but she also should have been afraid of him. She should have been carrying a knife around as he stalked her around the ship...instead they just agreed joint custody of the bartender
I will counter point #1 a bit...I was thinking about this during and whether this was some cheap copout but.....
What actually happened was the ship was in crisis mode but even then she wasn't just all forgiving there was a bit of yeah we are in this together and gotta survive somehow. but she didn't really forgive him, there was no real emotional scene until after he had basically sacrificed himself - for not only her but for the entire ship of passengers. He lived - or more to the point she rescued him and revived him. But it wasn't that it was simply action for actions sake and a blockbuster ending - they did create an ethical moment for him in which he redeemed himself in her eyes. that actually worked for me.
So what you're saying is that this might get the Blade Runner treatment with a director's cut and an ultimate cut?BassCowboy33 said:imjustsayin said:
I wonder how much Andy Garcia was paid for his role.
SPOILER
I read that the ending was the hardest part of the script for them to film. They actually filmed multiple endings and one of them was Garcia wandering around the vessel looking at the remnants of the previous 90 years. It was supposed to be a decent cameo, but at the end of the day, they decided against using it.
OldArmy71 said:
It is a bit problematic how they managed to have wild space sex for all those years without producing offspring, even unintentionally.