ItsPennAgain
ItsPennAgain t1_jacvfoq wrote
Reply to comment by ChiltonGains in At what point is a spoiler no longer required to be kept under wraps? by microwavedhottakes
Counter-Counterpoint: I just said it’s common decency. You can be an arsehole all you want, nobody’s stopping you.
ItsPennAgain t1_jachdf3 wrote
Reply to comment by HEHEHO2022 in What are the Top 5 films you think got snubbed from a Best Picture nomination? by Positive_Yam_9125
No fucking way did I think I’d see Our Little Sister in this thread! It’s the film that made me fall in love with cinema, and I could watch it a million times over and still feel the same about it.
ItsPennAgain t1_jac9vrd wrote
Reply to At what point is a spoiler no longer required to be kept under wraps? by microwavedhottakes
Spoiler tags are just respectful to do. I didn’t know the spoiler you included in your post, and i’m sure many others haven’t yet as well, even from something as popular or known as >!Citizen Kane!<.
Just because people are in different moments of their cinema journey, doesn’t mean that they don’t deserve unspoiled films.
In delegated threads, it’s understandable that there should be potential spoilers, but they give people a choice to see them or not. Just bringing it up in unrelated conversations doesn’t give people the option to decide to read it or not, which is why spoiler warnings is just common decency in that situation.
ItsPennAgain t1_j6omcuf wrote
Reply to comment by GoDucks71 in BABYLON in Three Key Scenes: An interview with Damien Chazelle, Cinematographer Linus Sandgren, and Editor Tom Cross about the movie's portrait of silent and sound filmmaking, and the crazy final montage. by Bullingdon1973
Well I meant controversial as in people liked it or didn’t — and judging by your response I guess that’s true.
I personally liked it a lot, and felt it wrapped up the movie celebrating cinema as it was doing throughout the film, but I can understand your opinion on it.
ItsPennAgain t1_j6olsq4 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in BABYLON in Three Key Scenes: An interview with Damien Chazelle, Cinematographer Linus Sandgren, and Editor Tom Cross about the movie's portrait of silent and sound filmmaking, and the crazy final montage. by Bullingdon1973
Yeah, maybe don’t say things you have no idea about because that’s just not true.
ItsPennAgain t1_j6oenu5 wrote
Reply to BABYLON in Three Key Scenes: An interview with Damien Chazelle, Cinematographer Linus Sandgren, and Editor Tom Cross about the movie's portrait of silent and sound filmmaking, and the crazy final montage. by Bullingdon1973
Am I crazy? I’ve never heard any controversy with the final scene… most people just talk about elephant feces, the golden shower or how much drug-fuelled hedonism is on display.
ItsPennAgain t1_jadtf7z wrote
Reply to Oscars: “Naatu Naatu” From India’s ‘RRR’ To Be Performed During Ceremony by impeccabletim
Please do not pull an encanto again and totally wreck the performance.