Conversation

Graham Sutherland / Polynomial

there needs to be a movie metric that counts how many times a character does something contrary to their motivation (including basic preservation).

the challenge is then to find a single horror movie from each release year that scores a zero. this is remarkably difficult.

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it is somewhat telling that the first one that comes to mind came out in 1979.

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my wife's watching a movie where someone has auditory hallucinations, has teeth fall out, vomits blood, bleeds from their eyes, and *decides to sleep it off*. YOU CLEARLY HAVE SOME SORT OF HAEMORRHAGIC FEVER GO TO THE DAMN HOSPITAL.

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@tef I'd accept the whole "hospital is expensive" excuse except for the bit where they went out of their way to point out that that isn't a problem for this character

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@irenes @gsuberland @tef as a society, we’ve forgotten the ravages of disease. =\

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@tef it's horrendous. everyone in it is a cliché and the acting is dire. there's a bit where someone strangles someone and you can see their hands just loosely hovering around the person's neck with a solid 1cm gap

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@whereisthespai @irenes @gsuberland @tef I think a contributing factor to this is the overwhelming amount of times people go to the doctor in the US and they give you no treatment or a treatment that ostensibly won't do anything, just make you *feel* like you're getting a treatment, like routine antibiotics given to people with viral diseases, mainly infants. We're geared to think medical care will likely send us into ruin, and likely we'll have nothing to show for it.

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@vivithecanine @whereisthespai @irenes @gsuberland @tef even doctors here misprescribe antibiotics :/ Honestly it should be a bit harder for doctors to prescribe them unless it’s directly administered

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