«I suggest you move to a small town that still embraces the rule of law,» a character
says near the end of the film.
Not exact matches
During an early screening
of Roland Emmerich's latest disaster flick 2012, which opens today, laughter erupted in the audience
near the
end of the
film thanks to corny dialogue and maudlin scenes (among the biggest guffaw getters: a father tries to reconnect with his estranged son on the telephone, only to have the son's house destroyed just before he could
say anything).
By the time we see a concert performance
of said music
near the
end of the
film, it's like an entirely new beast has presented itself.
«The
ending was really moving to me in a way that really helped me see this whole thing from a different perspective,» he
said of the
film, whose distributor, A24, recently put up a Disaster Artist billboard above Highland
near where The Room one once loomed.
There is a sentimental and touching scene
near the
end of the
film with Williams and Stiller
saying goodbye which, obviously, carries much more meaning that it did when it was
filmed.
As in Carol, the scene will be revisited, and completely recontextualized,
near the
end of the
film, when we learn what was being
said prior to the sudden interruption.
Say if
near the
end of the
film, parents are arguing, Jake is menaced by zombie and injures himself which causes he and his parents to focus on the real cause
of his distress... Maybe, I du n no.