- Seja o John Krasinski
- Fãs fazem campanha pra você conseguir o papel na Marvel
- Marvel te convida e você aceita
- Cena horrível com diálogos ruins
- 3 minutos de cena
- Dívida a opinião do público
- Mantenha o interesse no personagem e diga que quer continuar
- Mostre que consome quadrinhos do Quarteto desde os 9 anos
- Leia o roteiro do filme do Quarteto e diga a Marvel que está muito “genérico”
- Peça para dirigir o filme com algo mais científico e “pé no chão”
- Seja barrado
- Seja ignorado e trocado por Pedro Pascal
At the age of 16, me and my best friend (who gave me the name 'rebulast'), picked up our midnight release editions of Halo 3, sped home, told our parents it was important, and played more Halo than you could imagine.
There is no Warframe without the legacy of Bungie games.
Y'know, looking back, this scene is actually really interesting. I think it's a perfect example of suspension of disbelief.
Suspension of disbelief is what the audience is willing to believe is possible within the realms of whatever fiction they're watching.
Despite knowing humans don't have super powers, a character who says "My power is super strength!" and then picks up a giant boulder makes sense to us because we know what his power is. But if he suddenly starts flying, we go "Wait a minute, that's not right." because we only know of one super power and he never demonstrated flight prior.
The Avatar State in the OG show was very mystical and unexplained. It was sort of a Deus ex machina kind of thing, where it did whatever it needed to in the moment it was being used (to a certain point). Becoming a giant water koi monster to defeat the fire nation, allowing Roku to briefly possess Aang to save him from firebenders, allowing Roku to speak with Aang and tell him that the Avatar State was a defense mechanism.
There's a lot of things in the OG show that just kind of HAPPEN because the story needs it to with the AS. But we the audience can accept that and ignore things that may not entirely make sense so long as the quality of the storytelling is consistent and don't have us asking the wrong questions.
But there comes a point where the audience hits a breaking point. Back when Korra first aired (god I'm old), I remember just kind of accepting this scene even though I wasn't a huge fan of it, because the AS was capable of wild shit and this was really not high on the "no way this could happen" scale for me.
Season 1 of Korra was riding on the coattails of Last Airbender and there wasn't a ton of issues with its writing that fans were immediately noticing. But as Korra went on and more cracks in its writing began to show, people stop accepting the things that just "happen" because things weren't making sense as a whole. People stopped being as forgiving.
I still don't mind this finale myself, as it was a relatively happy ending and I like those. Where Korra lost me was cutting the past lives out of the picture which just blows full stop.