-
Sheila 2023-05-11 10:04:37
Hongguoguo conspiracy...
-
Thurman 2023-05-07 11:54:17
Another sci-fi classic in childhood. The government fabricated a lie about landing on Mars and killed the astronauts. The male pig's feet went through untold hardships and finally successfully overturned the conspiracy~~ There is a scene where the male pig's feet eat a raw snake. Date of viewing: 970823 (6) 971011 (6) 980118 (Sun) 981108...
-
Maymie 2023-04-28 00:13:28
Watching such an uplifting film in the last class. . . SO...
-
Bernardo 2023-04-25 10:09:29
Nice space movie, panorama shot on...
-
Garry 2023-04-12 10:18:12
The first feeling after watching this is the same as just watching Syriaa. How can the United States allow this kind of film to be released! In fact, it was originally a good film, but I felt that the story was not told well at all. I cried when Bru eating...
-
Osbaldo 2023-04-09 09:46:24
This movie is really creative. ....
-
Crawford 2023-03-11 22:25:13
Conspiracy theories, thanks to Jerry Goldsmith's...
-
Geovany 2023-03-11 03:54:00
The suspenseful atmosphere of this conspiracy theory movie is great, and the many parallel cuts are full of irony. A little procrastination in the middle, but the whole is still very...
-
Betsy 2023-01-30 22:44:02
When I was a kid (before the age of 12), I watched it in the 80s. I only remember seeing the astronauts climbing up the hill and finding that the bad guys were waiting to destroy them. At that time, there was a really hopeless...
-
Jaden 2023-01-16 15:32:40
A film that made conspiracy theorists come...
Capricorn One Comments
-
Edyth 2022-10-16 10:32:31
conspiracy theory fan
Wed Nov 10,
2004Conspiracy theory fans
sometimes feel that they are a conspiracy theory fan, and any strangeness will make them alert. Although there is a conscious adjustment to let oneself relax, the original vigilance from below the cerebral cortex still arrives as expected.
In the midst of...
-
Robert Caulfield: You wouldn't know sincerity if it ran over you.
Judy Drinkwater: Not if you were driving it.
-
Dr. James Kelloway: Okay, here it is. I have to start by saying that if there was any other way, if there was even a slight chance of another alternative, I would give anything not to be here with you now. Anything. Bru, how long have we known each other? Sixteen years. That's how long. Sixteen years. You should have seen yourself then. You looked like you just walked out of a Wheaties box. And me, all sweaty palm and deadly serious. I told everybody about this dream I had of conquering the new frontier, and they all looked at me like I was nuts. You looked at me and said, "yes." I remember when you told me Kay was pregnant. We went out and got crocked. I remember when Charles was born. We went out and got crocked again. The two of us. Captain Terrific and the Mad Doctor, talking about reaching the stars, and the bartender telling us maybe we'd had enough. Sixteen years. And then Armstrong stepped out on the Moon, and we cried. We were so proud. Willis, you and Walker, you came in about then. Both bright and talented wise-asses, looked at me in my wash-and-wear shirt carrying on this hot love affair with my slide-rule, and even you were caught up in what we'd done. I remember when Glenn made his first orbit in Mercury, they put up television sets in Grand Central Station, and tens of thousands of people missed their trains to watch. You know, when Apollo 17 landed on the Moon, people were calling up the networks and bitching because reruns of I Love Lucy were cancelled... I can understand if it was a new Lucy show. After all what's a walk on the moon? But reruns? And then suddenly everybody started talking about how much everything cost. Was it really worth twenty billion to go to another planet? What about cancer? What about the slums? How much does it cost? How much does any dream cost? Since when is there an accountant for ideas? You know who was at the launch today? Not the President. The Vice-President, that's who. The Vice-President and his plump wife. The President was busy. He's not busy. He's just a little bit scared. He sat there two months ago and put his feet up on Woodrow Wilson's desk, and he said, "Jim. Make it good. Congress is on my back. They're looking for a reason to cancel the program. We can't afford another screw-up. Make it good. You have my every good wish." His every good wish! I got his sanctimonious Vice President! That's what I got! So, there we are. After all those hopes and ll that dreaming, he sits there, with those flags behind his chair, and tells me we can't afford a screw-up. And guess what! We had a screw-up! A first-class, bona-fide, made-in-America screw-up! The good people from Con-Amalgamate delivered a life-support system cheap enough so they could make a profit on the deal. Works out fine for everybody. Con-Amalgamate makes money. We have our life-support system. Everything's peachy. Except they made a little bit too much profit. We found out two months ago it won't work. You guys would all be dead in three weeks. It's as simple as that. So, all I have to do is report that and scrub the mission. Congress has its excuse, the President still has his desk, and we have no more program. What's sixteen years? Your actual drop in the bucket! All right. That's the end of the speech. Now, we're getting to what they call the moment of truth. Come with me. I want to show you something.