This sets up
a great story premise for exploration, as what you need to do for each planet varies, and you will generally spend a lot of time driving around getting distracted by abundant side quests that exist on top of the story - linked ones.
Not exact matches
«RumChata has been a huge success
story in the U.S. and we believe that the strong on - and off -
premise relationships Bacardi has established will lead to
great success in Mexico.»
At least part of the credit belongs to screenwriter Diablo Cody, who seems to have set out to write a
greatest - hits Jonathan Demme movie — complete with full - length live musical numbers, kitsch décor, and a wedding — while taking another go at the basic
premise of her script for Young Adult: the
story of a nobody returning to nowhere.
While the
premise and source material are certainly unnerving enough to provide a
great story, the execution of Annabelle is fraught with clichés and obvious turns in plotline.
Characters are established, and actually stay in character while the
story's
great premise allows them to react naturally to the craziness around them.
Release date: February 2 Cast: Helen Mirren, Jason Clarke, Sarah Snook Director: Michael & Peter Spierig (Daywalkers) Why it's
great: Yes you've certainly seen this sort of «skeptic in a haunted house»
premise before, but when the house is this creepy — and the cast is this impressive — there's nothing wrong with curling up with a very familiar ghost
story even if you mostly know where it's headed.
Great premise: Using the tropes of the horror genre to tell the
story of Chris Williams (Daniel Kaluuya), a black guy visiting the family of his white girlfriend, Rose Armitage (Allison Williams), somewhere upstate.
It's a clever
premise, and there are some
great performances, including Kendrick's, but a few
story elements are fumbled to the film's detriment.
But, to its credit, Alias has a very intriguing
premise and does a
great job of sucking the viewer into the
story.
One of the
great American movies of the year, Jordan Peele's directorial debut has a lot on its mind: It's a blistering attack on latent white racism among America's wealthy one percent, and the
story merges the interracial dynamics of «Guess Who's Coming to Dinner» with a B - movie
premise worthy of George Romero.
Official
Premise: Mama Hook reminisces about her
great experiences sailing the Never Sea and the
stories she told young James Hook when he was growing up.
The author has chosen a
great premise — a world in the shadow of war, prime time for a burgeoning form of public entertainment — but never seizes the seemingly endless possibilities for intrigue and
story development.
And then I remembered, I had an agent, a
great agent, I wrote
great books (so all the rejecting editors told me) and yes, you are right, self pub has given my
stories a voice and an ear and the chance to be read, when they otherwise would have still been gathering dust on my hard drive, yet, on the other hand this is hard, REALLY HARD, it is SO hard to find your way to a readership as a SP, with limited funds (dwindling)... and the glimmer of trad pub — with their power to splash your name around established circles of readers, and their ability to secure a
great number of reviews where, as a self pub, doors have been slammed in my face — becomes temptingly shiny again, (it's like childbirth, you forget all the painful stuff with time)... and it all gets very tempting... almost tempting enough to consider sacrificing one work JUST one artistic
premise for the trade off of visibility... and then perhaps, just perhaps THEN, my SP efforts will finally sprout wings... but then I hear you and other say, it wasn't worth it, you'd never do it again, and I sigh... And then I wake up the next morning and think of packing it all in, and going to work for Walmart and steady shitty pay... lol And then along comes this blog post.
But as it turned out, the game was clever and the design paved a road for a much deeper
premise that told a
great story.
Sometimes, even the slimmest
premise can shine with
great character interactions, and Golf
Story delivers on that front.
What I Like: Unique setting and
premise; Engaging
story;
Great stealth system; Choices that matter;
Great skill system; Strict cash system;
I don't remember much of Halo's
story, and the Gears
premise is really just a snapshot in a
greater war.
The basic
premise is unchanged from the NES game, but the
story has been expanded by a
great deal.