One major spoiler annoyance I had was some troll in a Youtube comment posting that Kylo Ren kills his father Han Solo, about two days before The Force Awakens came out. It didn't actually diminish the impact of the moment, though.Anakin falling to the dark side and becoming Darth Vader (if you watch the saga in order). When I was 6, I like most in my generation was blown away by the reveal in ESB. I didn't even believe it until Yoda confirmed it 3 years later in RotJ. For my nephews, I showed them the saga 1-6, and not only were they in complete denial when their hero becomes the villain in Ep3, they still went nuts when Vader reveals the truth to Luke in ESB. They had been freaking out for a week after ANH trying to figure out how/when Luke would discover the truth.
Are you sure it dies? We see it stop trying struggling to get in and drift away, but does that really mean it's dead?The alien is killed by the emptiness of space and/or ship engines.
Yeah, Edge of Tomorrow was a great movie.A bunch of them go rogue to get THE PLANS and in the end they get THE PLANS but they all die (and aren't even mentioned in the sequel which gets released about 30 years earlier through tricking time.)
At least the guy who got the info on the Death Star II got a mention on-screen. When are we gonna get a movie about Menny Bothanz, anyway?A bunch of them go rogue to get THE PLANS and in the end they get THE PLANS but they all die (and aren't even mentioned in the sequel which gets released about 30 years earlier through tricking time.)
It's alive and dead until someone makes another movie and says otherwise. A Schrodinger's Alien. My take on it is that no creature that big is going to survive without pressure, nutrients, and protection from the harmful radiation of space. And being left adrift in space means an almost 0 percent chance of being found again. At that point it might as well be dead.Are you sure it dies? We see it stop trying struggling to get in and drift away, but does that really mean it's dead?
Are we talking about the one from Alien, or the Queen from Aliens? The Queen is a lot easier to find, just in low orbit over a known settlement. And even with the first one, Weyland Yutani have the logs, they know where and when the creature was ejected. If they got it into their heads to track it down for tissue samples it'd be a very difficult search, but possible.It's alive and dead until someone makes another movie and says otherwise. A Schrodinger's Alien. My take on it is that no creature that big is going to survive without pressure, nutrients, and protection from the harmful radiation of space. And being left adrift in space means an almost 0 percent chance of being found again. At that point it might as well be dead.
No, no, no, this is for films you care about being spoiled.Source Code: Jake Gyllenhaal is only imagining he still has a whole body.
Oblivion: Tom Cruise is a clone.