Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
Objective Aggie said:
Any movie that has a private investigator that uses black and white film when taking pictures of the parties he is spying on.
I mean, for investigative work, wouldn't color be more useful? Saw this in Unfaithful on HBO a week ago. It kills me.
Bruce Almighty said:Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
So it doesn't bother you that they're speaking modern day English in Ancient Greece, Rome, etc?
Because Russell Crowe is a better choice as Maximus than some no name Italian dude, not to mention, modern day Italians probably sound nothing like ancient Romans anyway, so it doesn't really matter.Champ Bailey said:Bruce Almighty said:Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
So it doesn't bother you that they're speaking modern day English in Ancient Greece, Rome, etc?
I understand the purpose for them speaking modern day English. What's the purpose for them to have English accents?
So why do you want to do that to the rest of us?PharmD4 said:
Somebody on this board pointed this out a long time ago and forever changed movies for me...
It always rains too hard. Go watch rain scenes...any of them...all of them...just torrential downpours every single one. Drives me crazy. I can't watch a rain scene without pointing out how unbelievably hard its raining. Even movies I like, great movies...The Departed for crying out loud...just too much rain.
So to whoever it was on this board a long time ago... thanks?
Bruce Almighty said:Because Russell Crowe is a better choice as Maximus than some no name Italian dude, not to mention, modern day Italians probably sound nothing like ancient Romans anyway, so it doesn't really matter.Champ Bailey said:Bruce Almighty said:Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
So it doesn't bother you that they're speaking modern day English in Ancient Greece, Rome, etc?
I understand the purpose for them speaking modern day English. What's the purpose for them to have English accents?
AT-AT's aren't really tank-like weapons, they are troop and\or equipment transport for ground assault.Burdizzo said:YouBet said:
I can't believe I'm going to say this and while it really doesn't bother me at all because of the coolness factor it's the most nonsensical military design of all time:
AT-ATs. What moron thought this would be an efficient and effective way to fight battles?
- The design of it would limit it solely to environments with zero elevation or terrain undulation.
- It has zero rear defense capability.
- It can only move in one direction about 3 mph and it has the turning radius capability of Austin Powers turning his golf cart in the hallway.
Coupled with this is the idiocy of the rebels not having a plan for easily wiping them out if they ever touched down. Simply set a trap for them to literally walk into and wipe them out from flanking and rear positions.
There is a lot of idiocy in the Star Wars franchise. Among many is the defense capabilities of the Millennium Falcon.
Those were shot by X-Wings who have more firepower than the speeders. They couldn't use the X-wing in Hoth because they were acting up with the cold.Quote:
of course, this all applies to Hoth AT-AT's. The AT-AT's in Rogue One were easily destroyed but maybe they were just early cargo versions
Thor zips back to his homeworld, tells the travel agent dude to put him back on Earth but this time on the north pole. He picks up his hammer.M.C. Swag said:
So if Thor is in the south pole and his hammer is in the north pole, what happens when he calls it? Because there's really only 2 options (neither is good):
1) The hammer circumnavigates the globe, potentially dealing massive damage to every building, highway, or forest tree in its path.
or
2) It cuts straight through the earth's crust and completely guts the planet core until it reaches the other side.
Sounds to me like Thor is a liability.
What if Heimdhal (sp?) is also on the North pole?Flashdiaz said:Thor zips back to his homeworld, tells the travel agent dude to put him back on Earth but this time on the north pole. He picks up his hammer.M.C. Swag said:
So if Thor is in the south pole and his hammer is in the north pole, what happens when he calls it? Because there's really only 2 options (neither is good):
1) The hammer circumnavigates the globe, potentially dealing massive damage to every building, highway, or forest tree in its path.
or
2) It cuts straight through the earth's crust and completely guts the planet core until it reaches the other side.
Sounds to me like Thor is a liability.
Hmm I don't think Thor is pulling the hammer. The hammer is simply propelling itself to him. (NERD TALK)MGS said:
So does Newton's second law apply and Thor is pulled towards Mjolnir with the same force that pulls the hammer to him?
So if Mjolnir is at the North Pole, it'll take a massive amount of force to bring it to the South Pole, and Thor will be pulled hundreds of miles underground?
Interestingly enough, Spain wasn't a country at that point, but it was a territory known as Hispania. So technically, they should have called him "Hispanicus" instead of Spaniard, or more colloquially for English speaking audiences, The Hispanic.YouBet said:Bruce Almighty said:Because Russell Crowe is a better choice as Maximus than some no name Italian dude, not to mention, modern day Italians probably sound nothing like ancient Romans anyway, so it doesn't really matter.Champ Bailey said:Bruce Almighty said:Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
So it doesn't bother you that they're speaking modern day English in Ancient Greece, Rome, etc?
I understand the purpose for them speaking modern day English. What's the purpose for them to have English accents?
Also, the Roman empire was pretty diverse. And Maximus was Spanish if I recall. I think he was even referred to as The Spaniard in the movie. Not that that explains his accent any better.
Debatable.Quote:
Interestingly enough
HA!double aught said:Debatable.Quote:
Interestingly enough
now i'm angry.MW03 said:
Here's one that always bugged me about The Last Crusade:
As they are escaping the Nazis from the castle, Indy sets up a boat to take off down the river. Despite the fact that it's empty, the Nazis buy it and jump into a boat themselves to take off after it. Indy and Henry then immediately take off on the motorcycle before the Nazis even pull out into the river. Buys them like 3 seconds. Why not wait in the crate until they can hear the boat pull away from the dock?
MW03 said:Interestingly enough, Spain wasn't a country at that point, but it was a territory known as Hispania. So technically, they should have called him "Hispanicus" instead of Spaniard, or more colloquially for English speaking audiences, The Hispanic.YouBet said:Bruce Almighty said:Because Russell Crowe is a better choice as Maximus than some no name Italian dude, not to mention, modern day Italians probably sound nothing like ancient Romans anyway, so it doesn't really matter.Champ Bailey said:Bruce Almighty said:Champ Bailey said:
Oh here is one that's always bugged me: Why in any movie about an Ancient Civilization (Greece, Rome, etc), are all of the people speaking with British accents?
So it doesn't bother you that they're speaking modern day English in Ancient Greece, Rome, etc?
I understand the purpose for them speaking modern day English. What's the purpose for them to have English accents?
Also, the Roman empire was pretty diverse. And Maximus was Spanish if I recall. I think he was even referred to as The Spaniard in the movie. Not that that explains his accent any better.
jenn96 said:
This is more of a side note than an answer to the issue of accents, but I read in Kirk Douglas' biography that when casting Spartucus, he chose to use British actors for the Romans and Americans for the slaves, to subtly highlight the difference for the audience. (Except for Jean Simmons - even thought she was British she was too perfect for the part). Which I thought made a lot of sense
Except The Walking Dead, where they are mostly British and can't act at all. Imagine how bad the show would be with Americans.Unthought Known said:jenn96 said:
This is more of a side note than an answer to the issue of accents, but I read in Kirk Douglas' biography that when casting Spartucus, he chose to use British actors for the Romans and Americans for the slaves, to subtly highlight the difference for the audience. (Except for Jean Simmons - even thought she was British she was too perfect for the part). Which I thought made a lot of sense
Today if you want a good young actor, they hire British to play Americans.
LOL, this is HORRIBLE. like basic execution of a movie or scene that completely failed. unbelievable.MW03 said:
Here's one that always bugged me about The Last Crusade:
As they are escaping the Nazis from the castle, Indy sets up a boat to take off down the river. Despite the fact that it's empty, the Nazis buy it and jump into a boat themselves to take off after it. Indy and Henry then immediately take off on the motorcycle before the Nazis even pull out into the river. Buys them like 3 seconds. Why not wait in the crate until they can hear the boat pull away from the dock?