Ever try to imagen what Poe may have been saying on the day of his early death(?), because I am laughing whilst laying in bed imagining the situation of Mr. EAP laying in a medical bed screaming code words for old proto-Latin words lost to time paired with high-IQ words to/about his doctors while he is both having a hangover & a meth overdose. " YOU SCOTUS CAPS!!! " " YOU METAPHYSICAL [a word worse than the worst word to have been eluded]" " I AM ONE WITH GOD JUST AS ALL OF YOU—"
- Author: HoboBilbo ( Offline)
- Published: July 6th, 2024 20:38
- Comment from author about the poem: Call me crazy, but I'm pretty sure To Boldly Flee (by Doug Walker) has inspired elements of both The Lego Movie and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. I don't have much evidence but hear me out. 1) In To Boldly Flee we see The Nostalgia Critic go into a giant space vortex that when entered is confronted and must come to terms that he is just a character. Not a human - just a character. When Emmet enters the vortex of his film he may be forced, but after this, he realizes he is nothing more than a Lego Minifigure and then becomes something more. In a DVD-exclusive scene that only exists online as a GIF The Nostalgia Critic does more or less the same (though admittedly this all happens in a manner rather stupid. To Boldly Flee is considered good by no one). 2) The antagonist in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is a character who has the anomalous power to create vortex/portals and his goal threatens all Marvel continuity; have you seen To Boldly Flee? In To Boldly Flee (a movie no one should watch, nor know what's needed to fully understand it) the premise is that a giant, anomalies, vortex-hole opened up in the vacuum of space near one of the moons of Jupiter and its existence threatens all of plot and continuity (you are about to read a spoiler to a movie no one should watch ~ quite probably ~ unless they are a writers-writer) & to save the day the Nostalgia Critic becomes the plot holes guardian and it grants him many meta-powers I won't go into ( it isn't really explored much, but that is probably for the better). Both movies were written and directed by the same three people and in (at least) two of their movies there seems to be inspiration from Doug Walker's, To Boldly Flee; is this just coincidence, or is this movie a source of secret influence for at least one of the three names for The Lego Movie and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. - also every Modern American writerโdo understand that this movie is more dumb & pretentious than smart & thought-provoking (even Fast 9 | the one where you see men drive a car in space).
- Category: Humor
- Views: 11
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