PRESS RELEASE: Eggman Takes Over Sonic The Hedgehog's Twitter Channel To Spread Propaganda Ahead Of The Sonic Forces Launch
More Evil Plot...
Not exact matches
«
More importantly, these trouble makers should refrain from linking Senator Saraki's name to their
evil plot.»
Well the film was wide release, so it makes sense there wasn't an entirety of focus on the specifics, but I still think it would have worked better if it was
more like the trailers professed intentions; doco style, with vignettes of alien / human scenes that emphasized and helped explain, not found footage either, like for example, after talking about Wikus in the past tense, it could focus on him for a bit then move on, but it stuck with him, and the film changed gears, I just thought it would have been better to focus on other things, as opposed to dumbing the
plot down to one man and his battle against the
evil government / corporation, and still stay in the doco style, it could have worked, no?
It's not without flaws, as there were too many moments where I thought Tom Hardy as Shinzon looks
more like a clone of Mike Myers» Dr.
Evil than he does Patrick Stewart, and there were
plot elements that were telegraphed long before occurring.
It focused on a war between vampires against werewolves, which included including an
evil scientific
plot to fuse two monsters together to make the villains even
more powerful.
Synopsis: The battle between good and
evil is even
more intense and dangerous than ever as Gingka and his friends face a villain with a
plot to unleash a long forbidden Beyblade in his quest to take over the world.
The extortion subplot involving Ansel's manager and Lance Reddick's shadowy menace (playing a mysterious figure in the way only he can) may be a necessary
evil to motivate Ansel toward taking on the family as clients, but in practice it is such a half - baked flimsy concept that it never evolves beyond
plot device status, feeling
more like manipulation than motivation.
The ridiculous
plot of the game involves Ryu's trademark weapon, the Dragon Sword, being magically absorbed into his right arm, transforming it into a marginally
more evil arm.
But «Catch That Kid» is a
more down - to - earth
plot without the
evil madman trying to take over the world — and the high - tech angle just doesn't work as well here.
Director Jaume Collet - Serra put Neeson through his paces in Unknown and does the same here, unleashing him on a script that is not much
more than a series of
plot twists and
evil genius scheming with so many moving parts that it could only work in the movies.
Rey \'s relationship with Skywalker, Ren \'s continuing conflict between light and dark, and Snoke \'s
evil leadership offered far
more intriguing
plots points.
While Extermination definitely needed
more sparks in the
plot and storytelling, the game still manages to represent the significant conceptual leap in gameplay that Resident
Evil should have achieved a few sequels ago.
Either as scripted or,
more likely, as directed by Paul W.S. Anderson (the Resident
Evil movies), Pompeii fails to make us care about any of its stock characters and, therefore, any of its predictable
plot developments.
Granted, it's working with a run - of - the - mill
plot involving a group of idealistic but profane misfits out to save the world from a an
evil genius with no credit... Read
More»
Whilst many have already given credit to the originality of the central
plot about a curse being passed on by having sex, let us not forget the works of directors such as David Cronenberg and, if you want to go even
more bizarre, Frank Henenlotter, who have both made films involving the distortion of sex and the idea of sex being the conduit for bad things to happen, And granted, the actual threat in It Follows is a supernatural one rather than one of the body turning on itself, but how many curse movies have there been since Ringu convinced us all that video tapes were credible vessels for
evil beings from other dimensions to cross over and kill us?
«Spectre» Year: 2015 Bond: Daniel Craig Girl: Léa Seydoux as Madeleine Swann Song: «Writing's on The Wall» by Sam Smith
Plot: Bond uncovers the existence of an
evil international organization, SPECTRE, and with the help of Madeleine Swann, an assassin's daughter, gets closer and closer to the heart of SPECTRE only to discover he might have
more to do with their sinister
plots than he thinks — and he's the only one who can stop them.
The
plot is driven by an
evil bounty - hunter rival and the cruel games he plays, but Maberry has
more than gore on his mind.
This second installment in the Magisterium series is much
more effective than its predecessor (The Iron Trial, 2014): the
plot is tighter, the stakes are higher, and Call's struggle with whether or not he is destined for
evil adds to the tension.
I just thought there was good and there was bad, and sometimes the bad wasn't so bad because there was great acting and a
plot involving something
more than good vs
evil and lots of explosions.
What starts with confusion leads into
more of a good - versus -
evil plot, but that's to be expected.
He's narrowed the search down to the small town of Dulvey, Louisiana and
more specifically, within the confines of the Baker Residence, and it's within these walls that you'll play out Resident
Evil 7's
plot.
Since its release, subsequent Resident
Evil games have spun increasingly absurd
plots with
more emphasis on Call of Duty - like action.
The four playable characters from the original story also return, but with fresh, over-the-top roles, as they learn
more about Wyler's
evil plot while fighting all - new varieties of the undead in an abandoned, lakeside summer camp where zombie ravers have taken over and turned the grounds into a techno - fueled illusion.
This ethos remains throughout Resident
Evil 7 and although many bizarre and uncomfortable events will occur over the next ten or
more hours, the
plot is easy to grasp.