CDLviking wrote:"God out of the Machine." It comes from ancient Greek and Roman plays where they would literally use a polley system to lower a god onto the stage to save the hero from the problem at hand.
SwordSkill wrote:i don't mind cliche themes unless they're presented in a way never presented before or if they're self-consciously presented to be satirical.
I hate those stupid, kids rule movies,
"I'm a smart little brat! hehehehehe!"
Anyway, Dr. Nic's power rangers comment inspired me to add something here: repetitive battles. There is a logic out there that says the only way to keep people interested is to have a battle during every episode of every anime or tv show. This is just ridiculous. These kinds of battles make a series way too tedious and predictable. It's good every once in a while to include a different kind of action instead of a battle into an episode, or just take a break for a while to develop characters. Characer development, yeah, what a concept..
Cursing and sexual content. Extremely annoying, overused, and does absolutely nothing to better the plot whatsoever.
uc pseudonym wrote:I generally interpreted it as "God by Machine" but I think he's probably more correct in this situation.
Ashley wrote:Hey! Ille mihi officium!
[translation: Hey! That's my job!]
CDLviking wrote:You know, I've always thought that it would be a nice change of pace if the hero didn't successfully disarm the timebomb at the last moment and it blew up anyway.
Cephas wrote:What I don't like is something I call "Main-character-can't-die-no-matter-how-bad-circumstances-are" syndrome. As I have said before, Tom Cruise suffers this syndrome from time to time in his movies (think Mission Impossible and The Last Samurai). It draws realism away from an otherwise-realistic story.
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