Every single actor plays their part and plays it extremely well, working together as an ensemble to serve the story
instead of a particular character.
Not exact matches
«Whenever... preachers,
instead of a lesson in religion, put [their congregation] off with a discourse on the Copernican system, on chemical affinities, on the construction
of government, or the
characters or conduct
of those administering it, it is a breach
of contract, depriving their audience
of the kind
of service for which they are salaried, and giving them,
instead of it, what they did not want, or, if wanted, would rather seek from better sources in that
particular art
of science.»
A few histories
of local churches have examined the identifying cultural traits
of their subjects, exploring the symbolic patterns that give a
particular congregation its unique
character,
instead of the far more common topics
of local church history, such as campaigns, catastrophes, and clergy.
The
characters are an entertaining group
of misfits,
of particular note is central protagonist and narrator Renton (Ewan McGregor), a young man with aspirations
of stability, and
of happiness in his life, but who is utterly unable to survive without «one more hit», the violent and psychotic Begbie (Robert Carlyle), who refuses to take heroin but makes up for not doing drugs by «doing people»
instead, and the childlike Spud (Ewan Bremner), the innocent fool
of the group, and the most vulnerable to peer pressure.
Instead of being a single super-soldier dealing out death (a tonal hallmark
of the Musou series), you're part
of a larger army; indeed, if you fail to switch to other units in some missions then failure is a very real possibility, as it's often the case that to reach a
particular objective in the fastest time you have to shift control to another
character.
This
particular game is a physics - based puzzle platformer where you don't actually control the main
character, but
instead you control an eraser, hence the name
of the game.
Instead, Soul Calibur V's story mode forces you to play through mostly as Patroklos and Pyrrha as they arbitrarily face
particular foes as the plot demands it — including a ridiculous scenario that sees four
of the game's Asian
characters just happening to be traveling in Europe.
Instead of attacking the
character or your spouse as a person, you are expressing dislike for a
particular way she acts or something he does.