You will notice early on that the Refn asks for a patient and attentive audience as there is very
little dialogue throughout.
Not exact matches
When you look at it as a whole you have a fairly decent screenplay with nice
dialogue, great sets, a glossy, well - polished look; plenty of gifted actors (Chris Cooper and Elle Fanning, above, particular stand - outs) doing their thing making the most of the material, and enough going on to hold you attention
throughout — but by the time you reach the end, one can't help but feel a
little empty.
Very
little dialogue is spoken
throughout the two - hour plus ordeal, and not because of the language barrier between the Englishmen and the naturals.
I grew up watching it, and
throughout the years I've appreciated it more and more, from being a
little lad with a crush on Willow and loving the fact that it was about a badass chick killing monsters to beginning to understand how the show subverted genre norms, or the clever
dialogue or the constant subtle things that were left unsaid.
These missions would have arguably had some justification had they at least been used to flesh out Mondo's personality a
little more, attempting to cultivate that James Bond theme, but he remains almost entirely mute
throughout each date, and your targeted «beauty» utters the same lines few lines of
dialogue over and over.
There's some nice
little bits of comedy
throughout, from the random phrases screamed by your future self as he is dragged away by the crab and shark, along with the cut scene
dialogue and other references as you play.
Cons: - Offers absolutely
little challenge in combat - Enemies variate very
little outside of bosses and offer almost no change - NPC
dialogue changes very
little and remains almost the same
throughout the game