What it means here is that the screenwriters and director Brad Peyton put the giant creatures in a few scenarios where they can cause chaos and destruction, while
everyone around the monsters plays the assorted scenarios with a straight face.
Not exact matches
How can he go
around blessing
everyone across the world while he is living in sin, hiding a bunch of
monsters that molest innocent little children.
The Bottom Line: My favorite pick because it's more a
monster movie than a disaster flick, this intriguing tale from 1962 (based on the 1951 novel by John Wyndham, who also penned THE MIDWICH CUCKOOS that spawned VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED on the big screen) begins with a meteor shower that liberally spreads killer crawling plant creatures
around the globe — with
everyone who has seen the celestial show going permanently blind.
Other neat multiplayer features are present, such as the Nemesis
monsters which can hop
around your friends list, growing in power for each person it defeats until somebody manages to kill it, at which point
everyone involved gets a reward.
When the minute
Monster eats a frog, he goes into a violent rage that's bad news for
everyone around.
Shelby runs
around without his mech while
everyone else gets their
Monster Hunter fix.
For far too long I've been annoyed at protagonists in the past who just sat there and let others dance
around the huge elephant in the room: the town is messed up, full of
monsters, and
everyone there is fighting for their lives.