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Orablanco Account

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    1. Megas

      Megas

      "You could make it for that same audience, which is what I did -- for nine and 10-year-olds -- or you could do the Transformers version and have Megan Fox." All of that has nothing to do with why your movie is so awful you twat

  1. Oh hey, site's working. anyway, freaking great episode.

  2. It was only a matter of time...

  3. Starting a new summer movie trivia series. First entry's an obvious choice. https://mlpforums.com/blog/722/entry-16590-summer-of-the-factoids-the-mad-max-trilogy/

  4. Maybe she just wanted to move out on her own as soon as she could, and the weather management position was open in Ponyville. She does seem like the kind to want to speed along to adulthood as soon as possible. She did mentioned she was the first in her class to get her cutie mark.
  5. Anyone else having trouble embedding Youtube videos?

  6. Anyone else unnearved by the return of Colonel Sanders? Can't place my finger on why, but it feels off to me.

  7. Anyone know any good streams for new episodes?

    1. Show previous comments  1 more
    2. Orablanco Account

      Orablanco Account

      Don't they play random ads during the episode?

    3. Megas

      Megas

      not that I'm aware of.

    4. Orablanco Account

      Orablanco Account

      Guess I got a crappy stream that one time.

  8. Another weekend and another reminder that you need to see Mad Max: Fury Road.

  9. Still nerding out over Fury Road. I haven't felt this strongly that I just watched a fantastic movie since The Dark Knight. Yeah. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgYnKu8RYAU

    1. BohabofEquestria

      BohabofEquestria

      #THEROADWARRIORISBACK

  10. Never change, Bob's Burgers.

  11. Saw Mad Max: Fury Road. You would be doing yourself a huge disservice if you do not see it in theaters. Very nearly perfect.

    1. Mars Orbit

      Mars Orbit

      im broke.

      Ruin it for me please

    2. Fluttershyfan94

      Fluttershyfan94

      It was awesome, went to the premiere had been waiting a long time for it. Ever since I read the rumors of the movie to watching it.

  12. I really love the rapid pace of the episode. They made an effort to introduce as many jokes and visual gags as they could possibly fit in, and almost all of them were funny. Loved it, 10/10, the universe is now complete.
  13. I think I really like Celestia now...

  14. "You're the most basic of jokes" is actually a sweet burn.

  15. This episode is amazing so far.

  16. Because it gave Rarity the chance she needed. Let's just say that wasn't all she did to his boat...
  17. You wanna know some sorta-interesting facts about an Australian exploitation action film franchise that introduced the world to the wonders of S&M leather? You talk to me. Welcome to Triviadome! Mad Max - Director George Miller pulled from his experience as an emergency room doctor and the deaths of several of his friends as inspiration for the violence seen in Mad Max. The idea of gangs fighting over gasoline ("guzoleen") was inspired by the 1973 Oil Crisis, as screenwriter James McCausland wanted a dystopian future based in reality. The movie was funded by Miller and producer Byron Kennedy's work taking late night emergency calls. - Max Rockatansky is named after Carl von Rokitansky, who invented the modern method of organ-removal during autopsies. - Mel Gibson only showed up to auditions to support a friend, but injuries he had received from a bar fight the night before made him look the right amount of "freak" the producers were looking for. He eventually got the titular role, while his friend Steve Bisley got the role of Jim Goose. - Hugh Keays-Byrne, a Shakespearean trained actor, agreed to portray the villainous Toecutter so long as other members of his troupe got to be in the movie. The producers couldn't afford to fly them down to the shoot, so they instead sent the actors their motorcycles and had Keays-Byrne and company ride down. Thirty-six years later, Keays-Byrne was brought back to play the villain of Mad Max: Fury Road, Immortan Joe. - Many of the other gang members in the movie were recruited from an actual biker gang in the local area. They were paid with beer and had to have written notes they could show to the police to explain why they were hanging around with weapons. The "get-out-of-jail-free" card makes it into the movie as a gag. - Ironically, the actress originally set to play Max's wife was unable to do so because of an injury from a motorcycle accident; Joanne Samuel was brought in as a replacement. - One of the first Australian films shot with an anamorphic widescreen lens. - There are two separate death scenes in the movie that feature a brief shot of the character's eyes bugging out of their heads before they bite it. - The weird dialect and mannerisms of the Acolytes gang were inspired by A Clockwork Orange, and Hugh Keays-Byrne based Toecutter's characterization on accounts of Genghis Khan. - Tim Burns apparently did such a good job staying in character as the obnoxious Johnny the Boy that no one liked hanging out with him. At one point, he was left hand-cuffed to a car while everyone else went to lunch. - The $350,000 production was so cheap that the crew resorted to stealing signs and returning them after the shoot. The only two police uniforms made of actual leather was Max and Jim Goose's. The others wore vinyl. George Miller ended up donating his van to be destroyed in the opening chase scene. Certainly a far cry from Fury Road, which cost over $100 million and went through a few re-shoots because George Miller didn't think he flipped enough cars the first time around. - They attempted to make the Night Rider's fatal crash more intense via a military-grade rocket strapped to one end of the car, but it went haywire on the first take and chased the crew for a quarter of a mile. - The final scene, in which Max suggests that Johnny the Boy get to sawing off his foot to escape death, served as the inspiration for a similar scene in Alan Moore's Watchmen and the Saw series. - The original America release of the film got an awful dub, as the distributor thought Americans wouldn't understand Australasian accents and slang. - Was bigger than Star Wars in Australia. Making $100 million on its small budget, Mad Max was the most successful movie ever made until The Blair Witch Project. Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior - George Miller initially didn't want to do a sequel, as Hollywood was flooding him with numerous offers, including one to direct First Blood. He changed his mind after a rock-and-roll movie he was developing fell through,with the promise of a bigger budget inciting him to further explore the world he created. - Influenced by samurai flicks, particularly Akira Kurosawa's work. - The black Pursuit Special used by Max is the same one used in the first movie. So it isn't technically an Interceptor, though "Last of the Pursuit Specials" does not sound as badass. - Max's outfit reflects a lot of cool continuity nods to the first movie. The missing right sleeve is a callback to his broken arm from the end of the first movie, which would have required cutting up his jacket for medical attention. He cut off some of the fingers on his glove so its easier to reload his shotgun. The leg brace is due to the bullet he took to the knee, and all the extra straps and harness stuck on his uniform are to help him repair the Interceptor in a hurry. - The location for the shoot was picked due to the lack of rain in the area. Once production began, it rained for the first time in four years. - Max's iconic pooch was an Australian Cattle Dog and was picked up from a shelter on the day before he was to be put to sleep. The constant engine roaring freaked him out, so they gave him doggy earplugs. After the film was shot, he was adopted by one of the cameramen. - The Lord Humungous was originally meant to be Jim Goose, who had apparently healed enough from his near-fatal crash in the last movie to more or less become a super-villain with an army of minions. The medals in his gun case implies some sort of tie to the Nazis. - Shot in the same order the story occurs. - Max only has 16 lines in the whole movie. - The rig that allowed close ups of the Interceptor in motion was improperly built, causing the rig to scrape the ground and sparks to fly whenever they went over a hill. The crew never bothered fixing it. - A total of 80 vehicles were built/driven/obliterated for this film. - The awesome shot of the goon flipping through the air during the final chase was not intentional. The stuntman accidentally hit debris while being launched, instantly breaking his leg and sending him cartwheeling around with a limb bent in the wrong direction. It looked cool, so they ended up using it. It was a happy accident. Sort of. Not for him. - Another stunt involving a car jumping a moat resulted in another broken leg for the stunt-driver. - The one stunt everyone expected to somehow do awry, the final truck flip at the end of the movie, went off without a hitch. - The much more violent original cut was heavily trimmed by Australian censors. Fortunately, that part where the guy's head gets knocked off by the tanker is still in there. Yay. - It was the most expensive film made in Australia at the time, and the explosion that destroys the oil refinery was the largest ever done for an Australian movie. - It was released as The Road Warrior in America, as the first only saw a limited release, and Mel Gibson wasn't a bankable star yet, so trailers instead focused on the car chases and crazy mohawks. For the record, The Road Warrior is the better name. Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome - Again, a Mad Max sequel wasn't the original intention. This was originally a Lord of the Flies adaptation set after the apocalypse until it was suggested by George Miller that the adult who eventually finds the kids be Max, and the project changed from there. - George Miller lost interest in the movie when returning producer Byron Kennedy died in a helicopter crash while scouting locations, but he eventually came around to seeing it through in honor of his friend. Miller directed the action sequences, while co-director George Ogilvie directed the drama. - In another bit of character design continuity, Max's left eye is permanently dilated in Thunderdome, a reference to his facial injuries sustained in The Road Warrior. - The steal mail dress Aunty Entity wears weighed 121 pounds. - The first Mad Max produced within the Hollywood production system. - Mel Gibson performed enough of his own stunts that he's credited a second time as a stuntman. Unfortunately, he doesn't appear to know how to hold a gun longer than a double-barrel shotgun. How embarrassing. Is this how Australian cops are trained to handle rifles? No wonder the country went to crap. - George Miller produced/wrote Babe and directed its sequel Babe: Pig in the City before making the Happy Feet movies. Not really trivia, but it's freaking awesome nonetheless. Hope ya'll enjoyed them facts. And as Mad Max: Fury Road is currently in theaters at the time of this writing, really must urge you to see it. I'd go so far as to say it's one of the greatest action movies ever made, and it deserves to be seen on the big screen. Don't miss it.
  18. MRA group wants to boycott the new Mad Max because there's a bunch of girls in it. Meanwhile, I laugh. http://www.dailydot.com/geek/reviewer-reaction-mad-max-sexism/

    1. Cwanky

      Cwanky

      So it's Mad Maxine now?

  19. I just don't like the idea of them flat-out living with ponies, let alone the idea that they have a town and a comic book industry and all that goofiness. It's like the writer really wanted to do something about racism and dragons, but all they could think up was having them literally live in an intercity neighborhood. And in an attempt to not write a story that wouldn't interfere with future episodes, they wrote a story that doesn't fit in with what little has been established at all.
  20. Freaking Francis at least made me laugh sometimes. "It's the second letter in 'death,' and the third letter in 'die!'"
  21. I like that we don't know too much about dragon culture, or whether they have much of a culture at all; the idea that they're too dangerous too be around and that's why ponies don't know too much about them. I'm cool with having dragons that aren't repulsive, but the idea of them living in what looks like Bedrock from The Flintstones right down the street from ponies is ridiculous. Besides clashing with that danger the show has been pushing up to this point, it makes Spike less unique. He was once the child of two separate cultures, trying to live up to the virtues and society he was brought up with while struggling to find out where he came from and how to cope with instincts that might not necessarily be safe for his friends and family. Now he's just some adopted kid going through puberty. It's like, "Why didn't we just go down the street and ask a dragon why our dragon turned into a giant monster?"
  22. How do we know her parents aren't present? That's just the same back story everyone concocts for her. If anything, we know her father cares enough to have her participate in her classmate's activities in "Family Appreciation Day." Anyway, no, she's not a well-written character. No, it's not because she's a bully character, because there's been plenty of bully characters who have been very entertaining, interesting, and worthwhile, such as Angelica as mentioned above, or Biff from Back to the Future, or the Plastics from Mean Girls and the Heathers from Heathers, or Nelson from The Simpsons. She's unfunny, obnoxious, and has had absolutely no character development in the show's five years of existence. I guess if that's what they were going for, than mission accomplished, but some writing above the level of "HUR-DURR, BLANK FLANKZ" would be nice. This show has featured dictators, heartless monsters, and soul-stealing psychopaths, and the fact that I welcome and enjoy their presence more than the bratty bully character seems off to me. That's not development, that's just more of the same
  23. No, there isn't any dragons living with ponies. It was obviously all a bad dream devised by Luna to teach Spike a lesson about dignity or something and is no way something that should be considered a piece of canon that would just so happen to ruin a lot of the mystique surrounding the dragons presented in the show and completely clashes with Spike's character development up to this point. It never happened. Anyway, what @@~Chaotic Discord~ said. I think dragons just don't care about anyone else. They're big and scary and live where they want, when they want, and everyone else has to deal with it. It's more a lack of respect than outright racism, or whatever the proper term for this would be.
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