It hits all
the right emotional beats exactly on cue, almost to the point of tedium.
The film hits all of
the right emotional beats to make this one heck of a ride.
What Richard Loncraine manages here, though, is a film that moves at the right pace and hits
the right emotional beats.
Not exact matches
Although it might be true that stocks almost always
beat bonds over long periods of time, striking the
right asset allocation balance may allow investors to better manage the
emotional response associated with heightened equity market volatility that often leads to poor investment outcomes.
I'll say more NO to: doing things which I don't want to but usually say yes to so I wouldn't disappoint others, feeling down or
beat myself up over every little thing which didn't go
right or as planned, being a perfectionist every single moment of every single day, going places or meeting people just because of FOMO, eating foods that physically don't make me feel good, no matter how big the cravings might be, buying new stuff unless I really, really need them or can't stop thinking about them,
emotional vampires who suck the life out of me and never bring anything good or positive along with them...
The
emotional beats are
right on cue - although this can be called into question slightly in the closing minutes of the movie - and the action scenes are visceral, real and are actually incredibly scary for a PG - 13 movie.
It eliminates anything feeling forced or contrived, with all the
emotional beats hitting just the
right notes.
In the same year, 300
beat X-Men and Superman at their own game, proving that if you can't get
emotional stakes
right, you at least needed amazing looking action.
Certainly it's not Final Fantasy IV, which begins with the moral and
emotional dilemma of a man forced to choose between the commands of his king and what he believes to be
right, but it remains a step up from «go get Erdrick's armour and
beat up the Dragon Lord.»