firemanbob
oct 2004 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
Nuestras actualizaciones aún están en desarrollo. Si bien la versión anterior de el perfil ya no está disponible, estamos trabajando activamente en mejoras, ¡y algunas de las funciones que faltan regresarán pronto! Mantente al tanto para su regreso. Mientras tanto, el análisis de calificaciones sigue disponible en nuestras aplicaciones para iOS y Android, en la página de perfil. Para ver la distribución de tus calificaciones por año y género, consulta nuestra nueva Guía de ayuda.
Distintivos4
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
Calificaciones34
Clasificación de firemanbob
Reseñas20
Clasificación de firemanbob
Just saw the premier double episode, and my first opinion is just "meh". A few of the characters (especially Franks, "Randy") are so overly written and acted that they are almost cartoonish. Gibbs is stiffer than rebar, and the only trope I didn't hear was the SAC saying "I want your gun and your badge on my desk". The story line itself wasn't bad, just the characters.
I'd like to see it succeed, but right now, it REALLY needs work. I'd be surprised if it makes it past the first season.
I'm going to give this a few more episodes to redeem itself, but so far, this isn't really all that great. NCIS it ain't.
I'd like to see it succeed, but right now, it REALLY needs work. I'd be surprised if it makes it past the first season.
I'm going to give this a few more episodes to redeem itself, but so far, this isn't really all that great. NCIS it ain't.
As someone who isn't a skier, but is active in outdoor recreation (I'd rather snowshoe), and lives in the mountains of Colorado, I was keenly interested in this movie when I saw the description. I was hoping for something great, and it is indeed great.
Told from the perspective of the people involved, and with no third person narration, this story unfolds with the events leading up to, and after, the avalanche.
You get an idea of what the people were like at the time, how much they've grown since then, and how much this affected them. They are at times very emotional, but always with a sense of honesty. They were mostly people (around my age, as far as I can tell) who were having a good time being ski bums, when tragedy struck. How they dealt with the tragedy is the main thrust of the story, and it is told with brutal forthrightness.
Even if skiing or winter recreation isn't your thing, this is still a movie to watch.
Told from the perspective of the people involved, and with no third person narration, this story unfolds with the events leading up to, and after, the avalanche.
You get an idea of what the people were like at the time, how much they've grown since then, and how much this affected them. They are at times very emotional, but always with a sense of honesty. They were mostly people (around my age, as far as I can tell) who were having a good time being ski bums, when tragedy struck. How they dealt with the tragedy is the main thrust of the story, and it is told with brutal forthrightness.
Even if skiing or winter recreation isn't your thing, this is still a movie to watch.
This is almost unwatchable. Dad loses custody of this kid because he's a drunken lout and, well, an idiot. The only mystery is why he didn't lose custody of his kid before now.
He's a drunk, irresponsible, and stupid, even if he is well - meaning. He drives drunk, sets his kitchen on fire and almost gets thrown in jail at this child custody hearing. And somehow, we're supposed to feel bad for him, and that somehow he'll redeem himself in the end.
I'm pretty tired of the "dad is a drunken jerk" movies, and this is yet another poor example of how Hollywood sees men.
It's not that there aren't men like this out there. There are far too many, but would it kill Hollywood to portray men, and dads, in a positive light.
He's a drunk, irresponsible, and stupid, even if he is well - meaning. He drives drunk, sets his kitchen on fire and almost gets thrown in jail at this child custody hearing. And somehow, we're supposed to feel bad for him, and that somehow he'll redeem himself in the end.
I'm pretty tired of the "dad is a drunken jerk" movies, and this is yet another poor example of how Hollywood sees men.
It's not that there aren't men like this out there. There are far too many, but would it kill Hollywood to portray men, and dads, in a positive light.