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                Matthew Krueger (10051 KP) rated Day of the Dead (1985) in Movies
Apr 1, 2020
                                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 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 Right Bid at the Right Time
Book
With this book, Neil Kimelman completes the trilogy which started with Improve Your Bidding...
John Bailey recommended L'Eclisse (1962) in Movies (curated)
David McK (3623 KP) rated Diggers (Bromeliad Trilogy, #2) in Books
Dec 23, 2020
                    Middle book in the late Sir Terry Pratchett's so-called Bromeliad trilogy, with the Nomes now living in a a disused quarry following their escape from the just-about-to-be-demolished department store of Arnold Bros (est 195).
Said quarry, however, is about to be put back into use, with this novel mainly following the exploits of Grimma, Dorcas and a few others when Masklin and a couple of the older Nomes go off on a mission to see if they can find a 'real' home for the Nomes; not somewhere that they have to hide from the Humans (who don't believe in them) as they have done all their life.
This is the one with the monster Jekub, and is slightly more mature than the previous offering in the trilogy (that would be 'Truckers')
    
Said quarry, however, is about to be put back into use, with this novel mainly following the exploits of Grimma, Dorcas and a few others when Masklin and a couple of the older Nomes go off on a mission to see if they can find a 'real' home for the Nomes; not somewhere that they have to hide from the Humans (who don't believe in them) as they have done all their life.
This is the one with the monster Jekub, and is slightly more mature than the previous offering in the trilogy (that would be 'Truckers')
David McK (3623 KP) rated Ptolemy's Gate (Bartimaeus, #3) in Books
Oct 19, 2025
                    The final part in Jonathan Stroud's Bartimaeus trilogy, all set in an alternative modern-day-ish London where magic is a real thing and with those able to wield it (or, more accurately, able to summon various magical creatures including Djinni to carry out their orders) in power, again following (roughly chapter about) the main three characters of the magician John Mandrake, his Djinni Bartimaeus and the commoner Kitty Jones who has magical resistance.
Which, as the ages-old Djinni Bartimaeus points out, is something he has seen time and time again throughout the ages: those able to perform magic rise to the top until magical resistance starts growing amongst the downtrodden commoners, who then over-through their rulers.
The trilogy, as a whole, I felt is enjoyable enough but does need to be read in order, with this perhaps the best.
    
Which, as the ages-old Djinni Bartimaeus points out, is something he has seen time and time again throughout the ages: those able to perform magic rise to the top until magical resistance starts growing amongst the downtrodden commoners, who then over-through their rulers.
The trilogy, as a whole, I felt is enjoyable enough but does need to be read in order, with this perhaps the best.
Luke (278 KP) rated Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) in Movies
Jul 17, 2017
                                Story                                                                    (1 more)
                                                            
                        
                                James Franco                                                            
                        
        This Film Is A True Rise For A Trilogy    
    
                    I really enjoyed this film, me and my wife recently rewatched this and we enjoyed it like it was the first time all over again.
Her gasping and every time oh no, whats going to happen reminds me of how into this film you get when watching it
    
Her gasping and every time oh no, whats going to happen reminds me of how into this film you get when watching it
Ross (3284 KP) rated The Bands of Mourning: A Mistborn Novel in Books
Sep 11, 2017
                    For me the second age of the mistborn (Wax and Wayne) pale in comparison with the original trilogy.  However, Bands of Mourning was a definite improvement over the previous 2 books.  A lot of the post-Harmony history starts to be uncovered and some very interesting things hinted at.  I am looking forward to the final second age book, and am expecting some fairly significant developments.            
    
Peter G. (247 KP) rated Paul (2011) in Movies
Jun 5, 2019
                    A conspiracy theorist and comic book geeks wet dream of a movie, not only bags of fun to spot the nods and winks but at times laugh out loud funny as Seth Rogan's voice is somehow ideal for Paul and with Frost & Pegg as co stars this really should have been the triple as part of the Cornetto trilogy over 'The Worlds End' by a country mile.            
    
Darathus (2 KP) rated Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi (2017) in Movies
Jan 28, 2018
                                Rey and Kylo Ren facing off again                                                                    (1 more)
                                                            
                        
                                Return to showing hope in a dark spot.                                                            
                        
        A new New Hope    
    
                    While there are many complaints of the handling of the Jedi path, I found this volume in the STAR WARS saga to be extremely fun, full of the hope the original trilogy inspired, and a lovely way to introduce more characters to root for.            
    
Deborah (162 KP) rated Winter Song in Books
Dec 21, 2018
                    Aimed at a young adult audience, this had a little of the feel of the His Dark Materials trilogy.  I found it an easy read, and read it in under one day.  I was underwhelemed on the whole - I thought the ending was unsatisfying and anti-climactic and most of the characters 2-dimentional and under-developed.  Some of it seems pointless and some of it unexplained.            
    







