The Face Uk Season 1 Vietsub

The Face Uk Season 1 Vietsub Average ratng: 3,7/5 2418reviews
The Face Uk Season 1 Vietsub

Love the films title, easily the main thing that lures you in, it intrigues and you want to know more. It totally has that cheesy, tacky, low rent, B- movie vibe in the title alone, on one hand that does help the movie because you instantly know what to expect, on the other it can also hinder the movie because its yet another low rent, B- movie zombie flick, and there's a shit- tonne of those around. Two of the lads are thinking of quitting Scouts for obvious reasons I don't need to go into here, whilst the third chubby lad loves the Scouts and wants to carry on. So that's the basis for their little story arc struggles. At the same time in typically glorious 8. Before you can say, help my intestines are being ripped out and eaten by some rotting, ravenous, cannibalistic, decaying human zombie from hell!

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That being said I do like the odd classic such as . I will say right here right now, I have never liked the Romero zombie films, there I said it, OK well maybe 'Dawn of the Dead'. Anyway me being an 8. You can tell from the films poster that they have clearly gone down that 8.

I think you can see clear homages to movies like 'Monster Squad', 'Fright Night', hell even 'The Goonies' to a degree. Its the perfect storm if you ask me, tried and tested, young teenage boys against monsters, add lots of cheeky, rude, infantile gags and voila! The cleaner is yet another young stoner type with ridiculous hair, in fact I thought he was one of the main protagonists. Anyway this sequence doesn't really do anything original but what it does is really effective and quite funny to boot.

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Of course its all stupid, this dumb cleaner starts poking around in the lab and fiddling with things.. He accidentally reanimates this zombie after thinking it was merely a sick person on life support, but the little gross- out sequence where he does this was a highlight. Nice visual gag utilising Tic- Tacs and a brilliant shock moment that seems to homage John Carpenter 1. The Thing'. All the while a whitecoat lab technician is trying to get some crisps out of a vending machine, whilst the horror plays out behind him through an internal window. As I said there isn't anything particularly original here, but that's not a bad thing in this instance.

The young lads are you're typical array of stereotypical young boys, one being smart, sensible and thoughtful, the leader. Another being more of a loose cannon, prone to getting into trouble, lax when it comes to things like having a conscience and obsessed with porn (well they all are). Lastly the third being an overweight, ginger who is also smart but in more of a nerdy way, he's also very sensitive and wears his heart on his sleeve. I've never heard of these three guys that play the characters but I enjoyed their camaraderie and hijinks. They all worked pretty well together and were relatively amusing at times, amusing not hilariously funny.

They also, naturally, have a sexy female on their side, again never heard of her but she's undoubtedly super hot and blonde. This did feel totally generic in the sense that of course you need a sexy chick in tight jean cut- off's going round blowing zombie heads off, its just a male requirement. So expect lots and lots of blood and gore as the small team go around shooting zombies in the head, cutting heads off blah blah blah.. The main hook for the movie is essentially the fact that the boys are all Scouts sooo.. Scout skills to survive and kill zombies. Its a neat little concept for sure but really all you're seeing is three guys equipping themselves with various regular household/DIY/garden items and modifying them to kill, or not as the case may be.

So you get a little 'Commando' tooling up montage homage which damn near every horror comedy tends to have at some point. I quite liked the brief moment where the camera zooms in on each Scout badge skill as they construct their weapons, nice usage of gimmicky idea there. Its also pretty dumb in places which is no surprise, the guys manage to get a hold of a flippin' Humvee at one point, probably the ultimate vehicle to have during this type of apocalypse, yet they don't really utilise it.

Plus they could of driven off to safety at any point in the film really, to hell with all the teens at the rave pfft! Plenty of cliches throughout too of course, like the grumpy old lady that hassles the boys at the start, well they naturally get to behead her as a zombie later on because.. The humour is there but its not really in your face good, it tickles you but that's it. Perfect example, whilst trying to escape from a window ledge high up, one of the boys grabs onto an elderly zombies cock to stop himself from falling. Said cock gets stretched out like a piece of elastic (exposing its fakeness) before splitting and breaking off. Now clearly this was supposed to be a funny sight gag.. This is how the comedy tends to be in general really, little things, like the boys getting all super excited over seeing a pair of big zombie tits, or going through a girls underwear draw (really?) or simply seeing a strip joint etc..

I get that its supposed to be juvenile humour, that's the aim, but maybe I'm too old for this now because it just seemed very lame to me. That being said I did still find myself enjoying this chaotic romp for what its worth. The film knows what it wants to be and nails that aspect of it, it doesn't ever pretend to be anything more that what it is, although it does get dangerously close to being too serious in places.

I think it is very 8. I love, I do like the Scout angle, the main protagonists are likeable and the girls are uber hot no doubt.

The continuous joke of seeing zombified Scout master David Koechner stumbling about desperately trying to eat someone was reasonably funny, it sums up the whole comedy aspect really, close but ultimately just missing the mark. Now waiting for the inevitable Girl Guides version with tonnes of risque, underage type humour and sexual innuendos aplenty.

Gravity Falls’ Alex Hirsch on his show’s big cliffhanger. Club(This interview reveals major plot points from Gravity Falls, specifically relating to the season- two episode “Not What He Seems.”)Disney XD’s Gravity Falls ended its most recent episode on a major cliffhanger: Not only does Grunkle Stan (voiced by series creator. Alex Hirsch) have a previously unseen brother, but that brother is also the six- fingered author of the journals that exposed twins Dipper (Jason Ritter) and Mabel (Kristen Schaal) to the strange and supernatural truth about their great uncle’s hometown. Following the premiere of “Not What He Seems,” The A. V. Club emailed our most burning questions about the episode to Hirsch; in his responses, the Gravity Falls creator writes about what “Not What He Seems” means for his characters, why those characters are more important than any mysteries they may solve, and how the Internet cracked the case long before Dipper and Mabel could. Alex Hirsch / Greg De Stefano.

The A. V. Club: Why make these revelations now? Did you build the cliffhanger into season two knowing that there’d be a hiatus at some point? Alex Hirsch: There were a number of reasons, but that was definitely a consideration.

It’s not easy to predict how the episodes will be spaced out, and in season one we were told by the channel that there would be a large mid- season hiatus. So to prepare for that contingency this time we decided to treat season two almost like two seasons, each with their own rising tensions and story arcs.

That way if it was split up again we’d at least be breaking it into satisfying chapters. Watch Peace, Love, &Amp; Misunderstanding Online Idigitaltimes on this page. But the other reason—and possibly more important one—is that half of the fandom had already figured the mystery out! As early as “Carpet Diem” in season one, fans were beginning to speculate about the meaning of the mysterious glasses in the Carpet Room, and during the year break between seasons, those speculations grew into full- blown “Stan has a brother!” expos. I’m talking Power. Point presentations, flow charts, timelines—this is probably the first time a Disney TV show has been analyzed like the Zapruder film. When we began season two, we knew that we couldn’t wait all season to dig into this. Halfway through the season seemed like a good compromise.

AVC: The authorship of the three journals was one of Gravity Falls’ biggest mysteries. How do you feel now that you no longer have to keep that secret? Does this free you up to tell stories that go beyond the contents of the journals—or is it the start of a whole new mystery? AH: Gravity Falls is a show about mysteries and magic but first and foremost it’s a show about characters. The arrival of a new member of the Pines family will have ripples that dramatically affect the lives of Dipper, Mabel, Stan, and others. It’s exciting to finally reveal this big answer, but even more exciting to me are the new mysteries that this will begin to illuminate.

Stan sacrificed so much to bring his brother back, but who is Stan’s brother? Why was Mc. Gucket so worried? How are the children’s destinies tied up in all this?

What is Bill Cipher really after—and who is the true villain in Gravity Falls? For fans of the show, the mystery has only just begun. AVC: Was Stan’s brother part of your original concept for Gravity Falls? Or was he a piece of the puzzle that presented itself after the series was in production? AH: Believe it or not, Stan having a secret brother was the plan from the very beginning, and if you start to go down the Reddit rabbit hole, I think your mind might be a little blown by just how many clues and hints we planted pointing to this conclusion, even going back to the very first episode.

From blatant things like Stan’s license plate having the wrong name (seen in episode 1. The Legend Of The Gobblewonker”), to metaphorical clues, like the broken two- kid swing set in Stan’s mind (seen in episode 1. Dreamscaperers”). Even the title of this episode is a reference to the code “Stan is Not What He Seems” hidden in the theme song seen in our very first episode.

Ever wondered why Stan was so distraught at his wax doppelg? The Internet sure did, and they’ve been very busy putting it all together ever since! AVC: How can Stan rebuild the trust Mabel and Dipper had in him? Or is that bridge burned? AH: Mabel is a character who’s trusting and forgiving by nature, and I think as long as she believes someone’s heart is in the right place she will give them a second, third, and fourth chance. Dipper isn’t nearly as trusting, so I think that when someone finally earns his trust, it is much more heartbreaking to have it violated.

Remember: The kids knew Stan as a liar before they knew him as someone who truly cared about them, so I think for a character like Dipper, he’s more mad at himself that he let himself trust an obvious con man like Stan in the first place. It’s a huge blow to his ego, a huge betrayal, and I think it will leave him feeling isolated from his family in a way he hasn’t been before. Where these feelings take Dipper will be explored in the upcoming episodes. AVC: In making “Not What He Seems,” were there any cliffhanger episodes from other series that you looked to as an inspiration, or as a guide for what to do/what not to do? AH: Cliffhangers are a lot of fun, but I think they can be easily abused if you’re not careful. The test I use is this: “Would the episode have still been satisfying on its own, even without the cliffhanger?” If the answer is yes, then the storyteller has earned the twist. Watch Inescapable Mediafire.

If the answer is no, you’re making a soap opera—an endless trail of breadcrumbs but no actual bread. Episodes like last season’s “Gideon Rises” deliver an entire satisfying adventure with its own conclusion before blindsiding you with the cliffhanger, and our goal is to follow that model. AVC: There’s a “government agents coming for E.

T.” vibe to the arrest scene in “Not What He Seems.” Were you hoping to show that Agents Powers and Trigger could pose as great a threat to the Pines as any of the paranormal forces in Gravity Falls? AH: Definitely. I remember as a kid being scared of the things that go bump in the night, but I was way more scared of adults. We wanted to show that in the world of Gravity Falls, Stan’s actions have had serious consequences, and that Dipper and Mabel are up against something they’ve never faced before. Ultimately though, the agents are just a plot device.

Their most important role, from a narrative perspective, is to act as a catalyst to turn our characters against each other and force them to confront their allegiances to one another. AVC: The events of “Not What He Seems” affect the whole town—were there any citizens of Gravity Falls that you were hoping to integrate into the episode, but couldn’t? AH: Our episodes have a strict 2.

I go even one frame over that, Mickey Mouse will eat me in my sleep. So every episode has ideas, characters, jokes, and scenes that I wish I could have included but had to be cut for time. Characters are sometimes skipped if they don’t directly affect the plot and we’re tight on time. This is actually something that fans frequently dedicate totally undue drama to. I see stuff like, “There was no Robbie this week! He must be dead!” “Mabel had less lines this week than last week!

Hirsch hates Mabel!” “WHERE’S GRENDA?! I ONLY WANT GRENDA!” I’m glad fans love the characters so much, but rest assured Gravity Falls fans!

Whoever your favorite character is, they’ll be back, and it’ll be awesome. AVC: Is there any significance to the “C” shape that the secret code to Stan’s hideout forms on the vending machine keypad? Or is this a “Is it a rock, or is it a face? I think it’s a metaphor” situation? AH: Your tin foil hat is starting to show, Erik! We never intended any significance to the shape of Stan’s secret vending machine code, but just the fact that you’re asking these questions makes me very happy. When I was 1. 2 years old, I was obsessed with codes, conspiracies, and secret messages.