Perpetual_Doubt
Perpetual_Doubt t1_ja8fd52 wrote
Reply to comment by Frexulfe in TIL a year after the defeat of the Spanish Armada, the English sent their own Armada to Spain, leading to similar losses of ships and men, and an ignominious English defeat by malektewaus
Oh yeah I'm familiar with the black legend.
To be sure, nationalism tends to ignore inconvenient truths for the sake of a good story, but common appreciation of history will also ignore the more convoluted or less significant data - so it sometimes becomes hard to distinguish one from the other. Certainly at the time, the propagandists would have been in full swing - after all this was the time of the Wars of Religion. If we think social media today to be reductivist, that has nothing on the early printing press.
English policy in this period swung a bit wildly and without landing any significant blows. They were participants in the French Wars of Religion (for instance the disastrous campaign to try and help La Rochelle under Charles I) and bizarrely with the Netherlands iirc (despite backing the Netherlands in the wars of religion). I think in the Spanish-French War they didn't know which to back, and their involvement wouldn't have been too important anyway. I think James was criticised for not getting more involved in helping the Palatinate, but England was quite poor after Elizabeth so that was probably prudent.
All of that is fairly messy and doesn't produce an interesting narrative - and certainly not one to be championed by nationalists.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_ja7t4qt wrote
Reply to comment by malektewaus in TIL a year after the defeat of the Spanish Armada, the English sent their own Armada to Spain, leading to similar losses of ships and men, and an ignominious English defeat by malektewaus
One of the reasons not to mention it was that England was a second rate power at the time. This is easy to miss given the later strength of the british empire - but back in the 16th century the Spanish Empire was one of, if not the most powerful nation in the world.
If I remember correctly the English Armada was meant to be opportunistic raids, while the Spanish Armada planned to entire subdue the English kingdom. This makes the former's humiliating failure far less significant than that of the Spanish Empire's.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j9xxwfh wrote
Reply to comment by Vince_Clortho042 in TIL Poltergeist, which came out in 1982, was rated PG. This is despite not just the movie fitting perfectly into the horror genre, but also many adult themes including the smoking of marijuana and a deep dive into the occult. by duganaok
They damn well killed that steak
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j92vu2z wrote
Reply to comment by OskaMeijer in TIL that "Lilo & Stitch" (2002) used exclusively watercolor backgrounds, since Disney, after some failures, was investing in other projects. This was later called a "hand drawn miracle". by starring2
The Cheshire Cat in Alice in Wonderland or Donkey in Shrek, are a cat and donkey respectively. Never mind their fantastical setting, if you had Donkey walking on two legs and declaring he was an engineer I would raise an eyebrow.
Same deal with the Jungle Book, if Bagheera had a doctorate and a snazzy waistcoat it would be... odd. Not saying you can't do it, but you'd usually want to have a good reason. Who Framed Roger Rabbit has a good reason - the distinction between humans and toons is the entire premise of the movie.
It's like Ebert said... it's not that you can't suspend disbelief, but what's the reason for?
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j92fzkp wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that "Lilo & Stitch" (2002) used exclusively watercolor backgrounds, since Disney, after some failures, was investing in other projects. This was later called a "hand drawn miracle". by starring2
>And you're completely wrong.
Not only am I not wrong, we are talking about a film which by any estimation was a box office bomb.
However this mix of styles is characteristic of the film in general, which mixes 3d and 2d animation, and 18th century technology and futuristic.
To my surprise reviews of the film were not particularly positive (69% nice on Rotten Tomatoes). To quote Robert Ebert
>I am not concerned about technical matters. I do not question why space ships of the future would look like sailing ships of the past. I can believe they could be powered by both rockets and solar winds. It does not bother me that deep space turns out to be breathable. I do not wonder why swashbuckling is still in style, in an era of ray guns and laser beams. I accept all of that. It's just that I wonder why I have to. Why not make an animated version of the classic Treasure Island ?
On the whole he gave the film a thumbs up, but he questioned the overall motives for these clashing decisions. Ultimately people's tolerance mileage is going to vary for its various flights of fancy. For me, it's seeing that the deuteragonist is a doctor who happens to be a bipedal dog whom all the characters pretend is not a dog. For others it might be using an 18th century galleon as a faster than light vessel.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j91quwh wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that "Lilo & Stitch" (2002) used exclusively watercolor backgrounds, since Disney, after some failures, was investing in other projects. This was later called a "hand drawn miracle". by starring2
It may appear arbitrary, but note that such a mix is highly unusual. I can think of no other example. I cannot think what artistic contribution it can provide, and makes the pitching of the movie more difficult.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j91pjmg wrote
Reply to comment by FitchInks in TIL that "Lilo & Stitch" (2002) used exclusively watercolor backgrounds, since Disney, after some failures, was investing in other projects. This was later called a "hand drawn miracle". by starring2
I personally think having a random mix of human and anthropomorphic characters is a mistake. Choose a lane.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j7tskh6 wrote
Reply to comment by __Shake__ in Just mixing people. by ooMEAToo
Like chicken, but without the goo
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j6oojeb wrote
Reply to comment by TLDReddit73 in TIL about cargo cults, where indigenous people of small tropical islands would perform elaborate rituals to mimic air traffic control and marching patterns after witnessing airplanes drop supplies on airforce bases during world war II. by sciencedit
Little did they know that the true magic ritual to cause US military supplies to be dropped on the island was to sink the USS Arizona
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j6k8ck7 wrote
Reply to TIL there are three species of elephants, not two. African elephants are broken up into 2 species, Forest and Bush. by lightsdevil
Utterly sucks to see the Forest elephant is listed as critically endangered
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j6isoww wrote
Reply to comment by radio_allah in Venus fly trap on the hunt by c0ntr0ll3dsubstance
ILL
^(ILL)
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j3o4rwn wrote
Reply to comment by MMachine17 in TIL Pluto hasn't completed an orbit around the sun since its discovery. Pluto's orbit takes about 248 years, and Pluto was discovered in 1930. by irbinator
Don't look up the orbit of Sedna.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_j336qlm wrote
Reply to comment by malphonso in A family finds swastikas in the lawn as antisemitism surges by Shaul_Ishtov
You mean socialists so
Edit: point out a non-authoritarian Communist. I'll wait
Perpetual_Doubt t1_iyceb3f wrote
Reply to comment by AMERICANDECLINE in TIL that beans are banned in Spacecraft because they can produce "1-3 cups of flatus" in an environment where there are no windows by April_Spring_1982
The court will now present specimen A1, a Daewoo 20l 800w Microwave
and specimen A2, an empty tin of John West Tuna
Perpetual_Doubt t1_ixe85ta wrote
Reply to comment by sparkyhodgo in TIL nearly 60 senators were part of the conspiracy to assassinate Julius Caesar, but he was stabbed 23 times, with only 1 wound being fatal. Caesar ultimately died at the base of the statue of his former rival, Pompey the Great. by axonable
Tony Robinson said the location was not at the base of Pompey's statue as that area was temporarily closed due to damage and it was instead in a more humble location nearby.
Perpetual_Doubt t1_iuht5oc wrote
Reply to comment by suvlub in TIL that one of the most popular medieval legends about Saint Nicholas of Myra (the original basis for the legend of Santa Claus) involves him magically resurrecting three children who were murdered by an evil butcher and sold as cured meat. by themightyheptagon
The whole place is pickled
The people are pickles for sure
And no one knows if they've done more here
Than they ever would do in a jar
Perpetual_Doubt t1_jbbzc59 wrote
Reply to comment by visualdon in A retro loop gif I made. by visualdon
One funny difference between the two is that the old one looks like daytime and the new one like night time to me.
Very cool gifv OP.