06-11-2012, 01:17 PM | #31 |
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Which is a great theory and I really dig it actually, but still doesn't do anything to explain the apparent contradiction with the opening scene of an Engineer drinking black slime in order to seed a world. I mean, yeah, I guess he could be infecting a world instead, but that doesn't seem to hold with the barren lifeless landscapes or what Ridley has said about it.
And Lumen, I hope I didn't seem to be suggesting anything else but that it's just a theory.
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06-11-2012, 02:48 PM | #32 | |||
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06-11-2012, 04:59 PM | #33 |
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I still can't get over the fact that this movie showed what amounted to an on-screen abortion. Sure, it didn't work out too well but holy shit. This movie did some shit that I did not think a major studio movie was allowed to do.
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06-11-2012, 06:11 PM | #34 | |
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Maybe the opening was a suicide of some kind?
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06-11-2012, 06:38 PM | #35 | ||
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06-11-2012, 07:28 PM | #36 | ||
I'm not even in the highscore.
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Regardless of whether Engineer Jesus was actually in the film or not, we basically have it on record that Scott is saying we pissed off the Engineers by killing one of them. And, I'm not even annoyed at it's on the nose. I'm annoyed because that idea doesn't fit in with any thing biblical that we know about Jesus. It was a little bit like Scott thought of the biggest part of Christianity and just made it an alien. Just because it's not in the film doesn't mean Scott didn't blatantly think it was a good, interesting idea. Which makes me think he has even less idea about what he's doing with this franchise than I did before I read the article. And this is coming from a fellow Lost fan. Quote:
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06-11-2012, 07:52 PM | #37 | ||
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I think it's perfectly fine that Scott has his own interpretation of Space Jesus, but he also made the conscious choice to not include it in the final product. Hence, it's not canon, just fanon from someone close to it.
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06-11-2012, 08:13 PM | #38 | ||
I'm not even in the highscore.
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But if you compare that podcast to a forum post such as this or a review, which is the viewer really going to accept as being truer to the material and apart of canon? The podcast from the mouth of the writers or the opinion of another viewer who had nothing to do with the show's conceptuality and development. Quote:
And besides, just because Scott didn't include it in this film doesn't mean it won't come up later. He's expressed in interviews that questions were left unanswered that could be explain in a sequel, so Space Jesus might still pop up. You can have your own interpretation but that is fanon. If Scott says something then that's canon.
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06-11-2012, 08:23 PM | #39 | ||
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06-11-2012, 08:25 PM | #40 | |
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I think we should all be able to agree that something is only canon once it shows up onscreen. Explanations given by the director/writer or the theories provided by fans mean nothing until they're put on celluloid because that's the only time it counts. George Lucas changed his mind a lot when making all of the Star Wars movies. |
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