"I don't like sand" isn't a particularly bad line or a non sequitur, and even just within its own scene is actually the LEAST bizarre or remarkable choice. When people quote it I assume they just like repeating memes, and haven't really seen the prequels in yearshttps://twitter.com/KYASARCHIVE/status/1274045115569504256 …
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Like most heavily memed-on lines could obviously just be transplanted into the script of a better movie and no one would care "Save Martha", silly as it is, hit the way it did because of all the crap preceding it
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Or Judy Dench staring directly into the viewer's soul and singing about what a cat is.
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ahh, the ole' tangible detail theory. Also why so much bad film discussion centres around plot holes when they are often the least of a films problems. They're just a lot easier to understand as oppose to tone, structure, pacing, etc.
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He went deeper into that in his review of Man of Steel. It was a real revelation and it explains why so many people are bad at reviewing. They think it's about counting moments when a true bad movie has problems that are fundamental affect every scene.
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