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Andy K (10821 KP) created a video about Forrest Gump (1994) in Movies

Jun 3, 2019 (Updated Jun 4, 2019)  
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Bubba on Shrimp

  
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Andy K (10821 KP) created a video about They Live (1988) in Movies

Nov 11, 2017 (Updated Nov 13, 2017)  
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"I'm here to chew bubblegum..."

  
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Andy K (10821 KP) created a video about Mission: Impossible (1996) in Movies

Mar 11, 2018 (Updated Mar 12, 2018)  
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Exploding Bubble Gum

  
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Gareth von Kallenbach (965 KP) created a video about Fortnite in Video Games

Jun 19, 2019 (Updated Jun 19, 2019)  
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Fortnite: E3 Bubble Video

Here is video that was made on site at E3 2019 for the Fortnite Bubble.

  
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Bubsy: The Woolies Strike Back – Gameplay Trailer | PS4

Our favorite Bobcat is making a triumphant return 20 years after virtually disappearing from the world stage (PS1). Yes, that’s right, Bubsy is back and starring in an all new adventure, Bubsy: The Woolies Strike Back!

  
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Pete Thompson (4339 KP) created a poll

Dec 5, 2020  
Poll
 Anonymous
Most iconic zombie

Bub - Day of the Dead

0 votes

Flyboy - Dawn of the Dead

0 votes

Tarman - Return of the Living Dead

0 votes

Worm Eye - Zombie Flesh Eaters

1 votes

Other - Leave a comment.

0 votes

Michael Jackson - Thriller

6 votes

Cemetery Zombie - Night of the Living Dead

1 votes

Big Daddy - Land of the Dead

1 votes

Vote
     
Day of the Dead (1985)
Day of the Dead (1985)
1985 | Horror
9
8.4 (12 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Bub The Zombie (1 more)
Capt. Rhodes
Night, Dawn and Day: The Perfect Trilogy
Day of the Dead- is the final movie in George's trilogy. It started with Night, than Dawn and now Day. The perfect trilogy about surival, surviving, surival of the finest and the livng dead. With great charcters, excellent villians and of course the zombies. In this one you have, Bub the zombie and the evil Capt. Rhodies. So thats a plus.

The plot: Trapped in a missile silo, a small team of scientists, civilians and trigger-happy soldiers battle desperately to ensure the survival of the human race, but tension inside the base is reaching breaking-point, and the zombies are gathering outside.

Romero originally intended the film to be "the Gone with the Wind of zombie films. This forced Romero to scale back his story, rewriting the script and adjusting his original vision to fit the smaller budget.

A total of five scripts were written as Romero wrestled with the film's concepts and the budgetary constraints. The first draft was over 200 pages, which he later condensed to 122 pages. This is the true original script, and to date no copies of it have come to light. This version was likely rejected because UFDC felt it was too expensive for them to produce even with an R rating. Romero subsequently scaled down the scope of this script into a 165-page draft (often erroneously referred to as the original version), then condensed it again to a 104-page draft labeled the 'second version, second draft' in an unsuccessful final attempt to get the story within budget parameters. When this failed, he drastically altered the original story concept and ultimately produced a shooting draft that numbered only 88 pages.

Its a perfect ending for a excellent and phenomenal trilogy.
  
The Lost Man
The Lost Man
Jane Harper | 2019 | Crime, Mystery
8
8.0 (4 Ratings)
Book Rating
I love Jane Harper and this book was certainly no exception. This is her first standalone novel (no Aaron Falk this time), and it is another beautifully written, captivating book that leaves you guessing until the very end. The characters are as scant as the landscape: the three brothers; their mother; Cameron's wife, Isle; Nathan's teenage son, Xander; a few workers from Cameron's property; and a couple of townsfolk. Yet somehow Harper weaves an excellent story that casts doubt from the beginning on what happened to Cameron. Did he purposely wander into the outback to his death? Or was something more nefarious going on?

While we're trying to figure out what happened, we're learning that something happened with Nathan in this isolated community, leaving him angry and alone. Bub seems bitter himself. Harper inserts tales of the family's past along with the present, giving us more details about our characters. And, at the same time, we start to see how no one's stories really add up. There's no real detective in this one, per se--at least no Aaron Falk, even if there is someone investigating Cameron's death--so things unravel mainly from Nathan's perspective.

And, of course, the unforgiving outback landscape is its own character: vast, stark, and dividing the brothers in more ways than one. Harper describes it so beautifully, just as she has done in her previous works. She so expertly captures the complicated family drama occurring as well as the small town dynamics happening in this often dangerous, isolated environment. The result, especially with these tense, well-drawn characters is a taunt, dramatic story that kept me reading and wondering until the very end.

I will easily read anything Jane Harper writes; her books simply do not disappoint. This one was different, in many ways, than the first two Aaron Falk novels, yet had many similarities, including her beautiful writing, nuanced plot, and wonderful characters. 4+ stars.