tomandshell

tomandshell t1_j6j5gpv wrote

Yes, the shooting of the old dog foreshadows Lennie's fate at the end. Remember that Candy says that he shouldn't have a let a stranger shoot his dog. He makes everything seem inevitable--I enjoyed it even more the second time, as there are so many things that point toward the conclusion.

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tomandshell t1_j27nfsr wrote

I’ve never seen it. I love the parallel development of young Vito building up the family while Michael destroys it at roughly the same age. I can’t imagine watching all of their respective scenes isolated in chronological order with the first film stuck in between. It would completely destroy the counterpoint that the second film achieves.

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tomandshell t1_ix9uowo wrote

I have never finished an interactive game and wished that someone would release a passive non-interactive version. Just about everything that made it a compelling experience would be removed. What’s more fun—playing a video game or watching someone else play a video game? Video game movies are like handing the controller over to someone else and just sitting there watching them have all of the fun.

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tomandshell t1_iuc8b4p wrote

Marion was such an incredible female lead that they just had to go in a different direction—I understand why they came up with such a different character with Willie, but she’s definitely a test of the viewer’s patience at times.

I think that fits in with the overall approach of the film, though. Rather than just doing a retread of the first and giving the audience more of the same, they went in a very different direction at every point possible. Throw out whatever you were expecting, because “anything goes.”

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