Thread:Panzysoldat/@comment-31330278-20190725214555/@comment-31330278-20190915101637

1. Happen to talk with Matthew yet?

2. It does matter. A killer's motive is always important when you come to rank him/her as a villain and understanding the character and the movie. For example: If someone tells me that Jill wanted to be famous, but disregard the fact she believed her mother loved Sidney better, and therefore hated her own mother since she was 2, I feel like this person missed half of the killer. Also, do you have a villainy chart for the killers? Who's most vile in your opinion and such.

3. Yesterday I watched the new "Robin Hood" with Jaime Foxx as Little John and Taron Egerton as Robin. The good people did an interesting choice with writing John as a Muslim who owe Robin after the latter tried to save his son. I wouldn't write something like that, but it's an interesting choice and I respect it. Will Scarlet was scary. His inferiority complexes and unrequited love for Marian led him to become the new sheriff. He isn't a psychopath like the former, but there's something scary and upsetting about a friend who gives up to his inferiority complexes and get caught up in doing bad things. Not sure if Will is missing in goodness or a bad man, but the good people made the brave choice with a sequel hook. I'm not sympathizing the sheriff here, but it's hard to tell how much of him was lust for power and how much is fear from his friends in the church. Gisborne was pure evil. It's sad, because until the part of threatening to rape Marian, part of me hoped he's missing in goodness. He was a better villain than the sheriff, and I wish he could be redeemed like his BBC Robin Hood version did.

4. By "I couldn't care less about who's the scariest", you mean you don't like this conversation, or just not enjoying the movie? Either way, i'm sorry you feel that way and hope you'll like other movies better. Horror movies doesn't scare me too much either. The real scary people are usually on thrillers and on the news. Fear is based on damage potential and similarity to what we know. Jill used to scare me because I used to have someone just like her at work, not because of the character herself.

5. Disagree. Pure evil villains have no right to have different sides seen in them, as they rejected redemption multiple times. They should've write Tyler as the protagonist. Like you said, seeing Tyler force them to apologize could be interesting.