But Mercury, the planet closest to the sun, shows
its face at odd times.
Not exact matches
Aasif Mandvi hits his (very
odd, in fairness) role
at about twice the volume and pace of anyone else, Justin Bartha barely figures, Mia Farrow is sweet enough, but doesn't make much of an impact, and Christopher Walken is interestingly restrained, adhering to normal human punctuation for the first
time in recent memory, but
at the same
time, hiring Walken to play an average suburban dad is about like hiring Jason Statham for a film where he doesn't punch someone in the
face.
Every day, sometimes even three
times a day, the nameless man in that story visits the Jardin des Plantes to stare
at the strange little animals in their cramped aquarium,
at their translucent milky bodies and delicate lizard's tails, their pink, flat, triangular Aztec
faces and tiny feet with nearly humanlike fingers, the
odd reddish sprigs that sprout from their gills, the golden glow of their eyes, the way they hardly ever move, only now and then twitching their gills, or abruptly swimming with a single undulation of their bodies.
The one element of 0.2's graphics that I'm not quite sold on is character models, stylistically I find them a little
odd, everyone is clean... like ridiculously clean, they almost look plastic
at times with shiny flat
faces.
However, it looks too much like a zombie game where there is only one of you
facing thirty some
odd monsters
at the same
time as your being chased to some unknown destination.