Minecraft: Story Mode - S2
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Now that Jesse and the gang have vanquished the Wither Storm, saved the world, and become totally...
The Sarashina Diary: A Woman's Life in Eleventh-century Japan
Sugawara no Takasue no Musume, Sonja Arntzen and Moriyuki Ito
Book
A thousand years ago, a young Japanese girl embarked on a journey from the wild East Country to the...
Miss Burma
Book
Miss Burma tells the story of modern-day Burma through the eyes of Benny and Khin, husband and wife,...
Fiction
Tuttle Travel Pack Indonesia: Your Guide to Indonesia's Best Sights for Every Budget
Book
The only guide you'll need for getting around Indonesia! Everything you need is in this one...
Rodolphe Bresdin: The Incorrigible Bohemian
Book
The book is the first published English language monograph of the distinguished French artist,...
The Bloodprint
Book
The author of the acclaimed mystery The Unquiet Dead delivers her first fantasy novel-the opening...
A Bazaar Life: The Autobiography of David Alliance
David Alliance and Ivan Fallon
Book
At the age of thirteen, David Alliance was taken out of school by his father and apprenticed into...
Last of the Kriegies: The Extraordinary True Life Experiences of Five Bomber Command Prisoners of War
David Fraser, Albert Gunn, Charles Clarke and Henry Wagner
Book
'For you the war is over'. 'Last of the Kriegies' tells the extraordinary stories of five of the...
Lee (2222 KP) rated Bird Box (2018) in Movies
Dec 26, 2018
But Bird Box does what AQP didn't, by going back in time 5 years to see how the apocalypse all came about. A pregnant Malorie is visiting the hospital for a scan, along with sister Jessica (Sarah Paulson), while news reports detail events unfolding throughout the world. Something is causing thousands of people to suddenly commit suicide, and it has found its way to American shores. As Malorie and Jessica leave the hospital, everything around them descends into panic, chaos and destruction. Cars crash, people throw themselves in front of oncoming cars and thousands of others are running to escape from who knows what. As her sister meets an untimely death, the heavily pregnant Malorie is helped into a nearby house where a large number of people have already found refuge.
We manage to catch our breath for a short while, while the survivors piece together what has happened, offering their theories. As one of them explains - "Humanity has been judged and we've been found wanting. They go by different names. You got world religion and mythology that's full of mentions of demons or spirit creatures. People who’ve seen these creatures almost always describe their encounter as with an entity who takes on the form of your worst fears, your deepest sadness or your greatest loss. It’s not bullshit. It’s real talk, it’s facts."
Life continues in the house for a while, with all the windows covered to prevent anyone from seeing something that might lead to their death. There's a tense trip to the supermarket for supplies, driving a car with blacked out windows and only a satnav to guide them, along with various dramas between the group. Every so often, we rejoin the future timeline, as Malorie and the children (referred to only as boy and girl) make their way along the river.
Bird Box is more of a slow burn than A Quiet Place, and we never actually see what is responsible for causing the suicides either, but I still found much to enjoy with it. And as we become fully immersed in the present timeline, following the blindfolded journey, things build to a tense and satisfying climax.


Beatriz (138 KP) Dec 26, 2018
Melkat1977 (4 KP) Mar 3, 2019