Thread:Panzysoldat/@comment-31330278-20190725214555/@comment-31330278-20190902225654

1. Sorry. I thought you watched it before. What's a proof-reader? If you had time to have this opinion, it means you've read it all so far. What do you think?

2. Jason didn't go to hell. The movie itself and its fans went to hell :-(. What you feel about FT13 is a soft version of what I feel about "Halloween". I like Meyers better as his capable of love versions, but still never liked this franchise too much. The cult sounds interesting though. I like the cult better than the evil spirit from the novel. If I do want to read the novel, can I find it on PDF or something?

3. Are you familiar enough with "Jurassic Park" for having interesting and intelligent conversations about it? Hope you do, because I have some ideas for a reboot, and only fans/open-minded people are capable of understand it.

4. It's fitting. Dropping the mug as soon as she realized the idiot is actually the mastermind is a strong moment. Slickface sounds better than Fauxface, partly because most of the killers (with the possible exception of Jamal) were faux to some degree. Now, I didn't want to be too blunt about it, but here it comes: At the scene when Cindy and Bobby had their first sex, Bobby was bursting like a river. Cindy flew to the ceiling. Not sure about my own ghostface names. Judgeface is a good name.

5. Me and a friend had a recent discussion about heroes in risk to corruption. Some becomes truly bad people (Commander Vic Hoskins, Alpha from "Men In Black", Koba, Frank Tenpenny and such), and others are still good people who caught up in doing bad things (Clyde Shelton, Nick Van Owen, Daenerys Targaryen, Magneto and such). The second type is called missing in goodness (MIG, a wordplay on MIA). Do you see Jamal as MIG, or as a bad man?