Raids in Stormblood — Final Fantasy XIV's latest expansion — have been split among the wings of Omega and an on going
plotline involving the Garlean Empire, the land of Ivalice and a theatre troupe.
With the film releasing only weeks after the Boston Marathon bombing and in the midst of the Syrian and North Korean crises, this disturbing
plotline involving terrorist activity blurs the line between news and entertainment in unsettling ways.)
With
a plotline involving a radical mosque, multiculturalism, and commercial development City of Tiny Lights sounds like a ripe and topical slice of modern noir set in the city I love.
A more probable
plotline involves a scenario in which the annual debt numbers become so bad, and draw so much attention, that our looming fiscal cliff once again becomes a major political issue.
For the most part, outside of the sensationalized gimmick of a man on a ledge calling the shots, most of
the plotline involves spinning the wheels until the final showdown, but by then, it's too little, too late.
I could go with divulging more about the various
plotlines involved in Vol.
The Dirty Dozen - inspired
plotline involves black ops ringleader, federal agent Amanda Waller (Davis, Blackhat), bringing together Task Force X, a group of strangers, all violently criminal super-powered sociopaths locked away in elaborately imagined high - security prisons, forced to do the government's dirty work to stave off the threat of other meta - humans that, in the wake of the death of Earth's savior, Superman, can't be stopped by conventional forces.
There are other
plotlines involving a romance between Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany), Gamora and her relationship to Thanos, cameos by some familiar characters, and a welcome trip back to Wakanda, the home of Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman).
The plotline involves a supposition that the global warming apocalypse that many scientists have been predicted is finally here, and in an accelerated example of such disastrous events, much of the Earth's northern hemisphere suffers from severe flooding, tidal waves and an ice storm that threatens to wipe out practically all life as we know it in those affected regions.
The second
plotline involves Rose, a Lakota woman close to Dulcinea whose family was devastated by Wounded Knee, and who still seeks revenge.
Another staple television
plotline involves bickering between couples: for example, Jenny's top priority is a slick modern kitchen with stainless steel appliances, while her husband Jim prefers to spend their money beefing up his sprawling entertainment room.
There aren't any cutscenes, story elements, or
plotlines involved; in each case it's simply a group of four survivors making their way to safety past hordes of zombies.
Not exact matches
Critic Consensus: No better than an R - rated «telenovela,» with the requisite love triangle
involving uncommonly attractive players and banal
plotlines.
A delicate and tearful romance that offers a surprisingly honest look into extramarital love considering when it was made, my sole objection being intrusive scenes
involving secondary characters which interfere sometimes with the focus and tone of the main
plotline.
While the subject matter is the stuff that good films are made of, and the quality of the direction and acting are worthy of admiration, where The East fails is in the contrivances
involved in the farfetched
plotline and the unevenness in the thriller elements (such as a scene in which the cell dresses up to the nines to infiltrate a party for pharmaceutical bigwigs that would feel more at home in a Mission Impossible movie) that undermine what could have been a chilling and realistic story of corporations run amok.
Intimidated by the amount of talent
involved in Fail - Safe, Kubrick filed a lawsuit asserting that the
plotline had been plagiarized from George's Red Alert, which Kubrick owned the rights to.
The political aspect of the film, with its people marching the streets for justice and a lack of understanding from local law enforcement, is reminiscent of another film
involving a
plotline where a young boy is ostensibly stolen in a carjacking, Freedomland.
The
plotline, such as it is,
involves Wade and his X-Force crew attempting to protect the teen mutant Russell aka Firefist (Julian Dennison) from sundry interlopers.
Possession faced a number of pitfalls in reaching the screen, foremost being the condensation of the two
involved plotlines into a screenplay; Byatt elaborated through 555 pages, while LaBute whittled the efforts of himself, David Henry Hwang and Laura Jones to a 102 - minute film.
There's an early scene
involving teeth whitening that incorrectly supposes the sight of McCarthy's teeth and gums will be funny, and at another point, she's catapulted into a wall by a sofa bed, because random physical comedy seems to be the movie's go - to mode whenever a scene or
plotline seems to be out of juice.
This domestic
plotline, also
involving Shelly and Phil's son Brian (Josh Hartnett, using a surprisingly believable accent), is played almost exclusively for (mildly affecting) drama, which clashes against the much lighter tone director Paddy Breathnach creates for the rest of the film.
And it turns out that the best way to talk about the game really does
involve time travel — because it
involves a plan two years in the making that stretches through the game's past several
plotlines.
We've heard essentially nothing about what the plot would be with this new game: while Resident Evil 6
involved multiple campaigns that all worked into a single coherent
plotline, until we see Resident Evil 7 at E3 we don't really know what the story would be.