Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-31330278-20180211164358/@comment-31330278-20190201102533

Off topic: In the last week I was healing from a nose surgery. It was broken in at least 4 places. Don't worry. It wasn't a specific person. I just fell twice. Once when I was three and once during this year. Now, I had to take the surgery, because it was either that or having my nose becomes more and more twisted. I could've never breath from my nose and live my life with a car accident where my nose is supposed to be. I lived this way for many years only because I thought it was my natural nose. As soon as I realized it's broken, I searched everywhere for a good surgeon, until finally finding the best and getting it over with. Yesterday I got my cast removed. Soon i'll have a normal nose. Some says even great.

And here comes the topics:

1. A couple of days ago, I watched a wonderful film referring to WW2. "9" by Tim Burton. A brilliant scientist invented a robotic hyper-brain, for the sake of mankind. But, just like with Einstein when he invented the nuclear bombs, a Stalin-like general (or maybe Hitler-like. Depends wether he was racist or not) forcefully took the hyper-brain for military usage. The destruction in Europe after the war? No where near it. More like the universal trash bin wasteland from "Wall-E". Only savage robots and ragged dolls (all are named as numbers. The protagonist is called "9", hence the name of the movie) were left to inherit earth. The zipper in each doll's torso must symbolize the emptiness everyone had after the war. The social Darwinist leader doll was an interesting touch. He kept saying "saving the others requires sacrificing the one", when things go to the real deal of destroying the hyper-brain, he chose himself to be the one. another one of the honest breed of social Darwinists. 8 years before Colonel McCullough. I wonder if the director of "War for the Planet of the Apes" was inspired by "9", specifically by the leader of the dolls for writing McCullough, or is it just that morbid people like Tim Burton and people who excel at dealing with wars think alike.

2. I believe you would like Doc Oc better if he was more like Hannibal Lecter. It popped in my mind a couple a days ago when I watched "Silence of the Lambs". Buffalo Bill's sick idea of killing fat women for stitching hand-made dresses out of their skin is more original than many horror films from the past 25 years. Clarice's soft southern accent gives me the theory she's the only real smart person of her family. As she came from a usually uneducated population, she must've did everything to get rid of her native accent. When I'm thinking on it hard, I can speculate why Hannibal ate people. He seems like someone who kill out of curiosity. Eating people is a sick extension of that. Do you see Anthony Hopkins playing Doc Oc/Norman "Green Goblin" Osborne? You gave me an idea for casting Jodie Foster as an older version of Barbara Gordon. She's too old to play Spider-Gwen/Wonder Woman/Super-girl, but she would do a great job at playing Barbara as a retired hero who come back for one last heroic deed and training a new hero.

3. If I was friend with someone like Anastasia, I would do many things to improve myself. With that said, I can relate to your vision of not improving Corvus for showing how much this world ruined him. When I'm breaking it down, i can say Father is like Toxo and Dante is like Kar. I think Alphonse serves a non-divine variant of Anastasia for Eduard. I never thought I would say it, but you actually made Aimee Teegarden scary. I mean, Jessica is the only sane horsewoman even when she become feral. Death and Pestilence could be the brainchild of the Joker and Scarecrow who do a brainstorming while taking one of Bane's drugs. Awesome job, Bro :-). I need a brief reminder about Famine though. Was he crazy like Death and Pestilence, or he can be argued as remotely sane?

4. I like your idea of considering writing Sobek as honourable. A reptilian psychopath with one shred of honor. like Rattlesnake Jake. I'm not saying Bill Nighy can play Sobek (his southern/Dutch accent makes him not very good for dubbing any Amazonian crocodile), but maybe Sobek can work in a western with a voice-actor who won't overdo the wild west thing. Not necessarily in an animal story full of expies. westerns overall. Re-watching Rango gives me a theory about the circumstances behind the former sheriff's death. As the wheelchair turtle mayor was very specific about employing Rattlesnake Jake and not liking to see Rango becomes true to his mask, the former sheriff was killed when he tried to do the right thing. The turtle mayor is based on Noah Cross, so I believe he brought his handicap on himself, either when he fought the late sheriff or when he fought another psychopath. If that's not the case, I cant see why would the good people get a villain sitting on a wheelchair. A real puppet-master who's all brain and little to none brawn, or at least to lazy to use his/her brawn, have no need in wheelchair.

5. All of the actors you just suggested sounds great :-). Tempelman can work for Blitz and for other low-pitched voice character. You gave me the idea of giving White two voices: His naïve phase will be dubbed as someone with regular/high-pitched voice. His corrupted phase, especially when he decide to kill Grey and become what his brother always wanted him to be due to valuing Panda's love over basic humanity, will be dubbed by one of your recent suggestions, or others in the low-pitch spectrum. Grey will use her natural voice both as herself and as her Manchester persona, because many of the sentient beings surrounding her are too stubborn/self-absorbed to notice the vocal difference. Jaden saw right through her disguise on first sight because he's attentive by nature. That's one of the topics i'll touch in "Chernobyl IL". Radioactive wasteland and separation wall as a result of too many people who act like animals at best and fighting over everything, but too little shows genuine care for others. Forgive my language, but sometimes I feel people should get their heads out of their butt and see what, and more importantly who, lies in front of them.