But, we don't follow the golden rule because we fear a god or
a bad afterlife.
You think your religion is the only one with
a bad afterlife for not living a certain way?
Not exact matches
Summary: «An Arizona woman enters the
afterlife and tries to become a better person and make amends for past
bad behavior in this comedy.»
If you are right (I think you are wrong) and dying in peace is the most important thing to take with you to an
Afterlife, then the right thing to do is let the dying person clear the Guilt,
Bad Feelings, and any other negative poisons out of their heart and soul.
I think that that goal is
bad too apart from there being an
afterlife.
All belief systems of this time period have a place where people go but not a good or
bad place, just a place... some have a place where REALLY
bad go but most just have the underworld type set - up as the
afterlife myth.
All religions have individuals who represent the very
worst of humanity in the forms of greed, abuse, hatred, oppression, and a desire to see those who would dare to disagree with their ideologies, in thought or deed, get their comeuppance either now or in some
afterlife.
Christianity promotes a better life in the
afterlife, regardless of how good or
bad you're doing right now; NOW is the moment that counts, not something you can't even prove.
I feel
bad for you on the
afterlife.
Fear of punishment in some imagined
afterlife isn't stopping people from behaving
badly any more than imprisonment or a death penalty is stopping murderers from killing.
Then again, if the Ancient Greeks anr Romans were right, then we are all doomed to a miserable
afterlife that all mortals share, good or
bad.
You will not go to some red and white coloured valhallah or be rewarded in any alternative
afterlife for supporting a money grabbing and
badly managed club in the
afterlife you know!?
January Dog Day Afternoon (1975, Sidney Lumet) 35 mm — 5.6 Always Shine (2016, Sophia Takal)-- 6.1 The Other Side (2015, Roberto Minervini)-- 6.7 Silence (2016, Martin Scorsese) DP — 8.6 Hidden Figures (2016, Theodore Melfi) DP — 3.9 Lumière and Company [segment](1995, Zhang Yimou) + Café Society (2016, Woody Allen)-- 6.2 [up from 5.7] Valley of Love (2015, Guillaume Nicloux)-- 6.0 Happy Hour (2015, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi)-- 7.6 + Moonlight (2016, Barry Jenkins) DP — 6.8 [up from 6.4] Red Sorghum (1987, Zhang Yimou)-- 6.7 Live by Night (2016, Ben Affleck) DP — 4.4 Paterson (2016, Jim Jarmusch) DP — 7.2 Don't Think Twice (2016, Mike Birbiglia)-- 3.6 A Monster Calls (2016, J.A. Bayona) DP — 4.9 + Silence (2016, Martin Scorsese) DP — 8.7 [up from 8.6] Indignation (2016, James Schamus)-- 5.9 + Elle (2016, Paul Verhoeven) DP — 7.3 [same] Split (2016, M. Night Shyamalan) DP — 5.8 Ju Dou (1990, Zhang Yimou)-- 7.0 Chronicle of a Summer (1961, Jean Rouch & Edgar Morin)-- 6.9 + The Nice Guys (2016, Shane Black)-- 5.8 [down from 5.9] Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016, Taika Waititi)-- 5.2 + Cemetery of Splendour (2015, Apichatpong Weerasethakul)-- 7.4 [up from 7.2] Throne of Blood (1957, Akira Kurosawa) 35 mm — 7.0 20th Century Women (2016, Mike Mills) DP — 6.9 Tampopo (1985, Juzo Itami) DP — 6.2 Swiss Army Man (2016, Daniel Scheinert & Daniel Kwan)-- 3.1 The
Bad Sleep Well (1960, Akira Kurosawa) 35 mm — 7.0 The Mermaid (2016, Stephen Chow)-- 6.0 Black Girl (1966, Ousmane Sembène)-- 7.0 Christine (2016, Antonio Campos)-- 4.4 Resident Evil (2002, Paul W.S. Anderson)-- 6.3 Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004, Alexander Witt)-- 5.4 Resident Evil: Extinction (2007, Russell Mulcahy)-- 6.6 Resident Evil:
Afterlife (2010, Paul W.S. Anderson)-- 6.9 Resident Evil: Retribution (2012, Paul W.S. Anderson)-- 7.3 Resident Evil: The Final Chapter (2016, Paul W.S. Anderson) 3D — 7.2 Raise the Red Lantern (1991, Zhang Yimou)-- 7.2 Julieta (2016, Pedro Almodóvar) DP — 6.5
You can't talk about the best sequels without talking about the
worst ones as well, so Bullz - Eye compiled a list of the movies so irredeemable that those responsible will surely be watching them «Clockwork Orange» style for all eternity in the
afterlife.
It is this journey, this
afterlife of debt, that Jake Halpern attempts to uncover in
Bad Paper: Chasing Debt from Wall Street to the Underworld.
In
Bad Paper: Chasing Debt from Wall Street to the Underworld, Jake Halpern examines the afterlife of a debt once it has been declared «bad.&raq
Bad Paper: Chasing Debt from Wall Street to the Underworld, Jake Halpern examines the
afterlife of a debt once it has been declared «
bad.&raq
bad.»
No, they went full - on necromancy with this
bad - boy, returning DOOM from the hellish
afterlife before proceeding to use their black magic to augment it into a new beast that is both recognizable and bloody awesome.
You're given a brief summary of what's going on in the R.I.P.D. universe (Ryan Reynolds is a dead cop and is recruited into an
afterlife police force that hunts
bad ghosts or something), then thrust into the match menu.