Alien : Thank you for posting this episode, d4rt!
[email protected] : Please put up a link to The Roast of Tom Brady (2024) on Netflix as i hear its ver very se...
random000 : Roger Corman! Big Bad Mama 1 & 2. 2 is unusual since it has Danielle Brisebois (who was th...
grasshopper rex : Bingo. Like Big Bad Mama, many of these films had strong women that dealt harshly with abu...
random000 : It seems so! Some of these exploitation films were directed by women, such as Doris Wishma...
kronickurves : Another fantastic episode!!!
mkmikas : support your local library vibe
grasshopper rex : To say that it's unfunny is a subjective opinion that, while I disagree, at least could be...
grasshopper rex : I remember reading Fahrenheit 451 when I was a teen and thinking it was farfetched and unl...
Overall this is a mildly to moderately enjoyable farce. After the first episode, the continuity and factual errors become a nuisance. A glaring mark against this series are the continuous factual errors around actually living and going out into the sub-zero temperatures of Antarctica (going out into minus 40-60 without a hood on, excessive vulnerable body parts exposed, no sign of cold air when speaking, etc. etc. etc.). The clues that Maggie is one of Sarah Jackson’s two daughters is there from episode two. The rape scene that is about to turn violent, and leads to Sarah’s murder, combined with the subsequent haranguing over convincing and persuading everyone into collusion, was a waste of valuable screen time and felt counterfeit in and of itself. The last act, and last 8 minutes of the series, was hastily thrown in as we learn of Aki’s fate; murdered by [fake] Maggie to cover up the revenge plot. Truly, this would have been so much better if they’d simply stopped the obviously contrived and spurious efforts, and concentrated on keeping it simple. 2.8/5
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