Why Modern Movies Suck - The Curse Of Multiverses

2024 ж. 21 Қаң.
1 242 899 Рет қаралды

If there's one thing everyone is sick of now, it's multiverses. Instead of an interesting new way to put characters in unexpected situations, they've become a crutch for lazy writing, and it needs to stop.
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  • Let's not forget the best line ever written in cinematic history: "Somehow Palpatine returned..."

    @MrNabura@MrNabura3 ай бұрын
    • A Long Time Ago, in a Multi-Verse Far Far Away...

      @davidanderson_surrey_bc@davidanderson_surrey_bc3 ай бұрын
    • Fuck that shit.

      @vee-bee-a@vee-bee-a3 ай бұрын
    • I always cringe when remembering that line, can't believe it wasn't fake.

      @CerealExperimentsMizuki@CerealExperimentsMizuki3 ай бұрын
    • Damn, I can't believe KZhead deleted my comment. What a time we're living in, eh?

      @vee-bee-a@vee-bee-a3 ай бұрын
    • @@vee-bee-a what was your original comment about?? And ice had that happen many times before, it gets very annoying sometimes.

      @CerealExperimentsMizuki@CerealExperimentsMizuki3 ай бұрын
  • The whole concept of a “multiverse” got played out way sooner than anyone expected, I feel

    @SheldonAdama17@SheldonAdama173 ай бұрын
    • it worked with spiderman not because it was a good plot device but we got to see all these old actors one last time together again which was fun

      @ironmonkey1512@ironmonkey15123 ай бұрын
    • Not in my universe

      @CoNteMpTone@CoNteMpTone3 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I enjoyed Spider-Man, but everything else with the multiverse theme has either sucked or I haven’t found interesting enough to invest time into to. And I agree, the whole, concept of multiverse has burned out really fast.

      @cws480@cws4803 ай бұрын
    • I thought it was played out in first season of Loki lol. That shit was so corny to me.

      @The_Primary_Axiom@The_Primary_Axiom3 ай бұрын
    • anyone who reads comics knew exactly how it would go. bottom line, it sacrifices the future for the present. there's a small bump in popularity then it drops off a cliff and most fans assiduously avoid anything multiverse related.

      @danielmckraken5160@danielmckraken51603 ай бұрын
  • The three worst ways to end a movie just got a new worst way. They are: 1- Time travel; 2- It was all a dream; 3- They're actually aliens; And entering at number 4- Multiverse!

    @invox9490@invox94903 ай бұрын
    • It was all a dream really pisses me off. Time travel sometimes works, like in the movie Project Almanac or The Butterfly Effect

      @MASTEROFEVIL@MASTEROFEVIL3 ай бұрын
    • I still cant decide if Donnie Darko had that or not

      @SomeCowguy@SomeCowguy3 ай бұрын
    • Number 2 is literally the biggest sin a movie can make. Every time I've ever seen a movie like that it makes me want to scream

      @hydrosynthetik2@hydrosynthetik23 ай бұрын
    • ​@@hydrosynthetik2 i can't remember ever watching auch a movie. Could you recommend me movies like 2?

      @hallihallo@hallihallo3 ай бұрын
    • @hallihallo it's not a movie that ends that way, but the amount of dream sequences in Slenderman 2017 had me riled up. There's also a bullshit movie I watched for free on Amazon Prime called Psychoshark, and that entire movie did appear to just be a dream sequence. It sucked total ass though even without the crappy ending. If you decide to watch it and die of cringe just remember I never told you about it

      @hydrosynthetik2@hydrosynthetik23 ай бұрын
  • One of my favourite writing KZheadrs always phrases stories like this: “It’s not about what happens, it’s about why it matters.” Amping up the scale to multiversal size doesn’t matter if it doesn’t matter to characters we’ve grown attached to.

    @jarmoliebrand2005@jarmoliebrand20053 ай бұрын
    • Case in point: most viewers cared a lot more about a kid in red underwear stopping a family man in a bird costume from stealing some C-tier Avengers merch from a plane to pay his mortgage, than they did about an entire multiverse worth of villains bent on destroying every iteration of infinite existence.

      @ScrambledAndBenedict@ScrambledAndBenedict3 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. A story can be really mundane or simple in concept. But if the character work is good, the audience will care. Internal conflict is what drives a story and is what makes us invested. Different kinds of external conflict can just be good additions to a genre, but that alone is not going to establish our empathy.

      @jarmoliebrand2005@jarmoliebrand20053 ай бұрын
  • This video series should be mandatory viewing for everyone working in the entertainment industry.

    @PoolKid75@PoolKid753 ай бұрын
    • Sadly they don’t care and don’t have mental capacity to even think outside of woke hive they built and they are mindless drones forever working for Female Message Queen

      @Jeffro5564@Jeffro55643 ай бұрын
    • Agreed.

      @JediRone@JediRone3 ай бұрын
    • I agree but it seems like the new generation has no respect for the past. Maybe 1 or 2 movies a year are really original with a lot of depth or just that in the west we get overloaded with studio garbage instead of more thought provoking films. It would be a nice break to see well written screenplays for a change.

      @bartsullivan4866@bartsullivan48663 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bartsullivan4866I think that's been changing as seen by the box office numbers. Gen-z is not falling for it as much as they want you to believe they are.

      @VioletDeathRei@VioletDeathRei3 ай бұрын
    • It's really sad that Hollywood writers are so stupid that this isn't obvious to them.

      @jej3451@jej34513 ай бұрын
  • Theres probably a multiverse where Critical Drinker is currently praising Disney for their female empowerment and "amazing writing" in the hopes of getting a Disney sponsor 😂

    @TikkiNikki@TikkiNikki3 ай бұрын
    • We have one in our universe, his name is Chris Stuckmann!

      @kin2955@kin29553 ай бұрын
    • Oh no, and he's sober while doing that!

      @TheGoodLuc@TheGoodLuc3 ай бұрын
    • You are very clever 😊

      @lordthorpe2642@lordthorpe26423 ай бұрын
    • The Forgiving Sober @@TheGoodLuc

      @SpookyScarySkeletor@SpookyScarySkeletor3 ай бұрын
    • Oh that’s a bit far fetched you’ll tell me is he wearing mickey ears next

      @neilyb4590@neilyb45903 ай бұрын
  • I think the “cannon event” idea from the spider verse films is a great workaround for having infinite realities while still having stakes. The idea that some events are unchangeable reintroduces tension, even if it’s a kind of retcon of the idea of multiverses itself, solving a problem that shouldn’t have existed in the first place

    @thomasdator3408@thomasdator34083 ай бұрын
    • sadly the only good movies currrently are animated except a few

      @raghavshukla2005@raghavshukla2005Ай бұрын
  • Only thing missing is Lucius discovering the multiverse and reviving Maximus in Gladiator 2.

    @Fjord1987@Fjord19873 ай бұрын
    • Zombie Maximus. Where he conquers forces east of the Rhine by eating their brains.

      @snakeplissken2963@snakeplissken29633 ай бұрын
  • Been watching some 90s block busters recently and it was so refreshing to just watch a movie that actually ends.. no post credit scene or sequel set up...

    @clayongunzelle9555@clayongunzelle95553 ай бұрын
    • You obviously missed the post credit scene in Speed..where Keanu's character said he gets Sea Sickness

      @natey3455@natey34553 ай бұрын
    • I wonder what people are thinking of an adjacent but far less common James Bond style of “timeless character”

      @Kane0123@Kane01233 ай бұрын
    • @@Kane0123 an interesting point but the difference with 007 is (outside of the Daniel Craig films) each movie was at least its own self-contained story. You had a clear villain and defined plot, and once the movie ended that was it. They all more or less followed the same formula, but that’s why they worked. They weren’t trying to string audiences along to come back 3 years later for the next sequel and then the next one and one after that in hopes of finally seeing a villain defeated or see a resolution to the story. Same reason shows like Columbo or Hawaii 5-0 or even the Twilight Zone and MASH were a hit. While they all followed the same main characters and allies, each episode was more or less it’s own individual story that didn’t string audiences along for an entire season to reach a conclusion like Game of Thrones did and so many other wanna be copy cats. Imagine if it took Columbo an entire season to solve one case, or if Rod Serling tried to hammer the same theme and mystery across 35 episodes? Audiences would’ve dipped out early especially back then.

      @lawrencetalbot8346@lawrencetalbot83463 ай бұрын
    • i recommend watching lethal weapon. they're masterpiece than modern boring marvel movies like brie larson's the marvels which is fucking sucks.

      @notkimpine@notkimpine3 ай бұрын
    • Even now post credits is exclusive to superheroes flicks. There's no way adult, award winning movies use that

      @brezzendorf@brezzendorf3 ай бұрын
  • This is the problem I have with The Flash series. Started watching it a couple months ago. Everyone always comes back, there's no stakes.

    @OfentseMwaseFilms@OfentseMwaseFilms3 ай бұрын
    • Now i'm invested in the character so I can't stop watching till I finish lol

      @OfentseMwaseFilms@OfentseMwaseFilms3 ай бұрын
    • Yup and there's aaaalways a bigger threat, before the old one is even defeated

      @blueshellhater1845@blueshellhater18453 ай бұрын
    • I stopped watching The Flash series around season 6 or 7. Got terrible with the stupid mirror girl episodes. lmao

      @Penelope416@Penelope4163 ай бұрын
    • It goes to absolute SHIT after season 4

      @EliC09@EliC093 ай бұрын
    • I watched about 4 episodes of the flash and switched it off, ironically I thought it was too SLOW, let's see how fast Barry can actually run, 4 seasons later still checking

      @snelgrave101@snelgrave1013 ай бұрын
  • I think you nailed it with the metaphor of a video game you can simply restart from the last save point. These "writers" are the generation that grew up playing restartable games (as opposed to games that cost you quarter after quarter just to beat one level, or board games that you could lose and be eliminated while others played on). Stakes are important for compelling storytelling.

    @jcb3393@jcb33933 ай бұрын
  • There was a time not long ago when writers were doing the shock and awe by killing off everyone's favorite characters regardless how it would impact the viewers or story line. It was like a Joe versus the volcano scenario of "We'll jump and we'll see". Walking Dead and Game of Thrones and others were doing this to the point where you just tuned in to see what favorite character they killed off in this weeks episode. So now we have the Multiverse or what I call the pet cemetery effect. And we all know how that turned out. What you bury is not what you get back.

    @Acousticeg@Acousticeg3 ай бұрын
    • Sometimes, dead is better.

      @stevepalpatine2828@stevepalpatine2828Ай бұрын
    • ​@@stevepalpatine2828i didn't even watch multiverse yet i love pegging multiverse concepts as a shit excuse like "oh look its spiderman but instead of web they/them shot toxic dildo

      @Tefezilla@TefezillaАй бұрын
  • I really hate it how pretty much every film we get today is setting up a shared universe or multiverse franchise. I miss the days of originality and excitement for movies.

    @LukimusPrime@LukimusPrime3 ай бұрын
    • TV too. The CW based their entire programming on crossovers involving all their superhero shows. None of which are entertaining anymore by themselves, so why do they think forcing me to watch them all would be better?

      @tnzwest@tnzwest3 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@tnzwestEXACTLY, i remember that when i saw the flash tv show i was excited to see other stuff, particularly legends of tomorrow......then i learned that i literally cannot watch that show and others because i had to get to an specific season of Flash AND arrow, a show i straight didn't wanted to watch, to understand the show. I said fuck that, finished the first season of the flash and dropped the dc universe entirely (mainly because i heard that the flash went downhill after a certain season and again couldn't watch the other shows, GREAT JOB douchebags

      @ironmaster6496@ironmaster64963 ай бұрын
    • Even _Captain Planet_ managed to get the concept of the multiverse right. 🤦‍♂️

      @JohnGardnerAlhadis@JohnGardnerAlhadis3 ай бұрын
    • Watch The Tomorrow War....its a stand alone film and it is absolutely amazing and one of the best films released in years

      @natekendall1976@natekendall19763 ай бұрын
    • I agree with everything you said.

      @shadowleon659@shadowleon6593 ай бұрын
  • I always liked the Lovecraftian idea of "Yes there's other dimensions and realities. You want absolutely nothing to do with them, there are very bad things out there and you'll go mad trying to comprehend it all"

    @Nomisdoowtsae@Nomisdoowtsae3 ай бұрын
    • And reality hopping can lead to a very, very bad things.

      @TheGoodLuc@TheGoodLuc3 ай бұрын
    • Event Horizon was a Warhammer 40k prequel.

      @Intranetusa@Intranetusa3 ай бұрын
    • That's what I wanted Multiverse of Madness to be: Our one warning of "do not fuck with this"

      @seanbell69@seanbell693 ай бұрын
    • I always think about that in Star Trek like, holodecks, alien influence, etc, everyone on the Enterprise goes through some kind of identity mindfuck every few weeks, seems like everyone would lose their minds never knowing if they can trust reality lol. Is this a normal day or is it just Q having a laugh? Better off not knowing

      @adamkares7549@adamkares75493 ай бұрын
    • ​@@adamkares7549I remember the episode where Riker was duplicated by the transporter because it proved McCoy was right about transporters all along. Those things are horrifying.

      @stevepalpatine2828@stevepalpatine2828Ай бұрын
  • This is such a rampant, reoccurring problem in so many franchises right now. On-point topic.

    @atticus6572@atticus65723 ай бұрын
  • That sort of analysis is exactly why you have almost 2 million subscribers - because you honestly deserve a listen. Being a Scot and hilarious likely help, but dang man - you are truly great to listen to. It is almost like taking a Masters Class in Storytelling to listen to your reviews

    @LarryFarr-mv8ug@LarryFarr-mv8ug3 ай бұрын
  • One reason I still love the original Karate Kid is because of the stakes involved. The world wasn't going to come to an end; it was just a simple regional karate tournament with an enormously tacky trophy. But the audience cares about the ending more than anything because they know that the real battle is taking place within Daniel himself, and that's what they're pulling for.

    @ep4169@ep41693 ай бұрын
    • The Karate Kid is probably my favourite movie but I think Mr Miyagi would be very disappointed with the man Daniel became.

      @mgtproductions9524@mgtproductions95243 ай бұрын
    • Called Crane technique. If do right, no can defence.

      @monkey39128@monkey391283 ай бұрын
    • Amazing 😅​@@monkey39128

      @blue_belt_blues9554@blue_belt_blues95543 ай бұрын
    • Its like that old Jean claude Van damn movie where the fought in that tournament as well.

      @manoftomorrow5987@manoftomorrow59873 ай бұрын
    • @@mgtproductions9524 I feel like that's a big point to it that the series does tell well, more so towards the beginning, where he's trying to figure out what Mr Miyagi would do or tell him in situations where he feels lost or recalling old lessons and hidden subtext in his teachings bla bla bla. To me the dynamic between him and Johnny is fantastic because it's quite clear that Johnny creates chaos and unbalance in Daniel's life even just by running into each other but there's no Mr Miyagi to ground him back to a balanced mindset. Can't forget the 3rd movie either (even if many try to) where we get to see the darker side of Daniel who is still an emotional teenager who is very much still impressionable, that Cobra Kai stuff probably did some long lasting damage. And like ep said it's in great deal about the internal battle of Daniel to try to keep that balance, keep that darker impulsive side in check and be better so I hope the last season doesn't forget about the whole point of reconciling and learning to accept and forgive in the first place.

      @pm-5565@pm-55653 ай бұрын
  • It really says something when studios take a concept with limitless potential and somehow manage to make it the most bland and uninspired thing ever.

    @JasonLyman-ny4hm@JasonLyman-ny4hm3 ай бұрын
    • Seems like the smartest people don’t make it to the point of running things in certain industries. Imagine if nuclear plants or other important infrastructure were run like that. Now that I think about it, sometimes it is sadly.

      @noneed4me2n7@noneed4me2n73 ай бұрын
    • It's a perfect example of just how tired and lazy almost the entire industry has become. Imagine being a Christopher Nolan only going to the bathroom twice a day during 12+ hour shoots to not waste people's time when your "colleagues" are just shitting out garbage CGI and multiverses while jerking off to furry porn in their trailer.

      @st0nedpenguin@st0nedpenguin3 ай бұрын
    • That is because executives and not creatives are in charge

      @CabezasDePescado@CabezasDePescado3 ай бұрын
    • I blame lazyness. Writers could reasearch comic-books or sci-fi novels for months before coming up with a script. But they would need to put a lot of effort in it. Ripping off a good idea from an obscure source would be much better than this crap.

      @laurocoman@laurocoman3 ай бұрын
    • I suspect that the writers that would put months of research in before proposing a script are long gone from today's Hollywood.

      @alexdoiron8419@alexdoiron84193 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the Red Dwarf reference and comparison. That episode was a(nother) example of the great writing on that series. The whole idea explained and explored in one tightly written episode. Thanks for the great explanation. Cheers. P.S. Stoke me a clipper, I’ll be back for Christmas!

    @parklloyd6690@parklloyd66903 ай бұрын
    • I had such a crush on Ace Rimmer. What a guy!

      @stargazerbird@stargazerbird3 ай бұрын
  • I write D&D campaigns for my friends and am currently pulling them through what is essentially a Multiverse arc. Sure, the whole of mortal reality is unraveling, but instead of "infinite realities" I have limited the number to 15 parallel universes - Paraverses, if you will - and use each one to showcase how each player character, if they made just the slightest changes to their moral codes, could go off in a completely different direction. The point of my multiverse isn't to remove stakes, but to heighten them by forcing each character to look inward and ponder what their motivations and moral roots are.

    @mistermarkham101@mistermarkham1013 ай бұрын
    • That sounds amazing!

      @hectorzero8545@hectorzero85453 ай бұрын
    • I'm employing a similar idea in my campaign, where 90% of the terrible things that happened in the players' pasts were the direct meddling of a lawful evil god who intentionally orchestrated multiple crisis to generate heroes capable of ultimately stopping the BBEG, and through dreams, being charmed, and vailed exposition from some of the other powers-that-be, they are going to learn that none of them are leading the lives they are meant to. My goal is to somehow have them end up body-swapping with their alternate universe counterparts and getting the team back together (they're all from different corners of the world), before traveling back and eventually confronting the god who set all this in motion.

      @roguebarbarian9133@roguebarbarian91333 ай бұрын
    • That's really cool. How did you form these Paraverses, if you would?

      @scarletrevolt@scarletrevolt3 ай бұрын
    • I assume you mean that each of your 15 universes has every single event and decision happen identically up until X or Y choice, then?

      @lumeronswift@lumeronswift3 ай бұрын
  • The Agent Smith explanation of "Antagonist Dilution" was great.Excellent point made.

    @SiriuslyBlack7@SiriuslyBlack73 ай бұрын
    • Great username, even better pun

      @kokuutou92@kokuutou923 ай бұрын
    • @@kokuutou92 I even have Lucius' wand/walking stick,Sirius' wand,and my Death Eater tattoo!

      @SiriuslyBlack7@SiriuslyBlack73 ай бұрын
    • Always gave that one the benefit of the doubt when I was younger thinking it was just the clones so basically NPCS

      @scott8448@scott84483 ай бұрын
    • Agent smith is still one of the greatest villains ever

      @gabrielhersey5546@gabrielhersey55463 ай бұрын
    • Its solveable problem, but not easy one. If main antagonist multiplied, one that took maximum efforts to beat previously, then now they must become unstoppable force, as our now more experienced protagonist can fight and maybe even beat two of them at time, but if there is dozens then all protagonist can do is run and hide until he find solution. Or, if the protagonist now THAT powerful so he can take out dozens of instances of previous main antagonist, then writer must prove to audience that its hero become powerful, not villains weak - let them easily defeat some allies of protagonist that could stood against antagonist previously, let protagonist be completely undefeatable for mid enemies from previous movie (and then give him even battle with multiplied antagonist) but ultimately its bad decision to multiply specifically main antagonist. "He was so powerful and now its MORE of them" is theoretically good hook but its so big jump power-wise that most of the plots cant stand it and end up just unexplainable nerf him. Much better if multiplied one is not final boss, but first. Someone who hero beat when his training arc was complete. Then dozens of that enemy is believable threat step higher than former final boss, and hero can fight all them at once if use maximum efforts as dramatical plot is needed

      @AtticusKarpenter@AtticusKarpenter3 ай бұрын
  • It's A Wonderful Life is technically a "multiverse" trope. But did George Bailey realize he needed to defy the space-time continuum to save all of existence in every universe? No. He reaffirmed his love for the people in his life and emerged from the experience changed for the better. Ya know, an ARC and a STORY. Damn, that movie is good.

    @Mantisisland@Mantisisland3 ай бұрын
    • A Christmas Carol.

      @strangelee4400@strangelee44003 ай бұрын
    • Part of the problem I think (and I didn’t watch the video yet so maybe he mentions this) is the mixing of different franchises and iterations. It takes away the feeling that when you’re watching something that it’s meant to be the definitive storyline. Takes away the feeling of it being that writer/director’s interpretation of a story when you can just say “oh yeah all those other versions of this story exist in this world too, just in the multiverse” Get what I mean?

      @bradysmith4405@bradysmith44053 ай бұрын
    • Ebenezer Scrooge is brought to the future by the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come and discovers a fate he must change so he’ll have mourners when he dies. But is it apocalyptic? No. The only person liable to die for his failure is Tiny Tim but that it makes it a better story because it puts a human face on it

      @matityaloran9157@matityaloran91573 ай бұрын
    • Enjoy the memory of it while you can, because there are plans to "wokify" it too.

      @animeangel1983@animeangel19833 ай бұрын
    • A wonderful life isn’t really a time travel story it’s a one man can make a difference to all those lives he touched story like his brother dying means those soldiers he saved died it’s all connected that’s the point maybe there is a plan in the universe

      @neilyb4590@neilyb45903 ай бұрын
  • My biggest problem with multiverses is the same as my biggest problem with 108 item buffets. At first, it seems amazing and incredible, and holy shit! You probably can get whatever the hell you want. Awesome. Until you become overwhelmed by the sheer number of choices, you quickly realize that some choices (crab legs) are far superior to others (lookin at you, orange jello), and ultimately, you can never really satisfied bc you can never really feel confident in your choices, or worse, you have to cram in so many choices to feel like you got your money’s worth, you end up throwing up and you feeling worse than when you started. Yeah, that’s pretty much my analogy. xoxoxo ❤

    @DrCatterBox@DrCatterBox3 ай бұрын
    • Choice paradox

      @otmossampacado1550@otmossampacado15503 ай бұрын
    • the internet did that to us also. All information is no real information

      @LorenzoMasterConnector@LorenzoMasterConnector3 ай бұрын
    • Same thing at the supermarket. When I was growing up, there were five flavors of ice cream, and maybe five toppings for pizza, and only three flavors of potato chips. Today there are a dozen choices for each. At least. I counted eleven varieties of prepared tuna fish. Even had a choice of how it was packaged. Canned or in a pouch. Sometimes it is a resealable pouch. WOW !! When I was about twenty years old I used to complain there weren't enough sci-fi movies, or novels to dig into. I knew there would be eventually, given time. Today, I complain about the opposite. There is WAAAYYYY too much of both. If you throw comic books into the mix, it's completely overwhelming. On a scale, I never thought would be reached. At least it's better than nothing at all. Maybe that's the way to look at it. Happy shopping everyone.

      @stephensmith7293@stephensmith72933 ай бұрын
    • @@LorenzoMasterConnector Very good point

      @herheartbeats5727@herheartbeats57272 ай бұрын
    • you hate the Multiverse now but when Deadpool 3 and Avengers: Secret Wars come out you will fanboy over it.

      @FazeRustyNuts@FazeRustyNuts2 ай бұрын
  • I’m willing to interject, at least a little, about “the characters don’t matter because we can just get them from another universe”. I feel like it’s done right when there is still weight to the initial death. The only example I can recall is the Injustice 2 video game. There’s a specific intro between Black Canary and Green Lantern that goes as follows: BC: Go to hell, Jordan GL: Still angry with me? BC: Is my Ollie still dead? In my eyes, it drives the implication that those close to the one lost are suffering an inner conflict due to the fact that the lost ones were “replaced”, but are still dead. I’ve never seen Hollywood think, or even attempt to make us think, to apply it in such a way, and they probably won’t anyway.

    @kexard@kexard3 ай бұрын
  • I’d be fine with multi verse in Star Wars if it meant that the last 3 movies were actually some distant universe that we can write off and ignore they ever happened

    @billanderson1965@billanderson19653 ай бұрын
    • Star Wars is a massive galaxy with a massive history spanning millennia. There are so many possible opportunities and story ideas that could be explored, yet we only ever see the same period of approximately 100 years.

      @Simplebutsandy@Simplebutsandy3 ай бұрын
    • @@Simplebutsandy this

      @ryantylervo@ryantylervo3 ай бұрын
    • Add to that Dr Who...

      @WhiteDragon689@WhiteDragon6893 ай бұрын
    • @@Simplebutsandy thats just the cocksuckers known as disney being lazy and just using the clone wars and empire era as a cashcow since star wars fans will accept anything these days just as long as its mildly better than the sequels which makes andor an anomoly since most expected that to be crap

      @username.exenotfound2943@username.exenotfound29433 ай бұрын
    • they are.. they are from an universe were Luke is a pathetic green milk sucker looser 😕 that none of us care about 🤷‍♀

      @Ramdileo_sys@Ramdileo_sys3 ай бұрын
  • I'm reminded of the character from the movie "The Core" who talked about how he wasn't there trying to save the world because the world was too much to consider. He was there to save his wife and daughters. Saving the world was just a bonus.

    @michaelplowman8674@michaelplowman86743 ай бұрын
    • That's a fine movie. An utter nonsense popcorn movie but fabulously entertaining with a superb cast giving it everything.

      @davidferguson1785@davidferguson17853 ай бұрын
    • Just wanting to save the Earth/humanity is always a bit abstract and corny in these types of disaster movies. Having actual _personal stakes_ makes everything much more relatable.

      @EvilDoresh@EvilDoresh3 ай бұрын
    • Nah, that's just stupid. Of course saving the world matters and of course we all understand and are deeply invested. This is just an asinine concept.

      @Arphemius@Arphemius3 ай бұрын
  • Using Matrix’s Agent Smith as an example of “antagonist dilution” was epic!!! Thanks for a great channel. Bring back good movies

    @Pglarsen@Pglarsen3 ай бұрын
    • Was epic alright... an EPIC FAIL! Because it was a completely wrong example, guess Drinker drank too much that day. But i never expected the dumdums of the comment section to figure that one out. FIGHT ME!

      @DustMan2704@DustMan27043 ай бұрын
    • The problem with that example is that Smith weakening was a sign that Neo had gotten much stronger and so Smith (which is the avatar of the machine's AI that keeps humanity imprisoned) had to get extra creative in order to carry on fighting.

      @curiousconsultant7922@curiousconsultant79222 ай бұрын
  • This video gave me a quick thought of how Kang could have been used effectively as a multi film primary antagonist without one defeat reducing future appearances. First antagonist Kang could have mostly spent his movie as a assumed major threat, one whom people who know him fear, and he could have had some handful of powerful robot warriors (suggested to be just a fraction as strong as Kang himself) serving as the battle threat. Then, when they're finally defeated and the worn out, near hopeless heroes have to come up against Kang himself...they find out that he is like the Wizard of Oz, a man giving off the appearance of power from behind a curtain but ultimately lacking in skill or strength. He would be quickly beaten up by the good guys, surprise, and then as the movie begins to wrap it would be revealed that this Kang was little more than a servant, one who managed to escape and take some of the true Kang's tech and bots and such. Thus, our heroes would come to the realization that there IS a Kang threat out there, one even more powerful than assumed in the movie we had just watched. Cue the common thread for the Phase in which these heroes would need to work to convince skeptical needed heroes to prepare and/or come together to face the coming threat (which would manifest in other preliminary ways, not always as the primary threat of a film).

    @redsoxu571@redsoxu5713 ай бұрын
    • That's essentially what they did in Loki, when they first introduced Kang. "He Who Remains" was a relatively pacifistic version of Kang who was trying to stop all the other variants from rising up. Taking him out is what opened the door to the other Kangs being unleashed on the multiverse. But it still ends with the same problem: there are infinite Kangs out there, so defeating any one of them is always going to be a hollow victory.

      @OzmaLogical@OzmaLogical3 ай бұрын
    • Sorta. My proposal sticks with "good" Kang in Loki, and then the first bad Kang in Ant Man could have been an introduction to him as a bad guy...but fixed the problem of undermining him by beating him over and over by having him be a subservient one who escaped from the big bad Kang. I suppose there could still be a big bad Kang, but having already encountered one legit bad Kang does undercut, as this video lays out.

      @redsoxu571@redsoxu5713 ай бұрын
  • Anytime I hear “Multiverse” it means I have alot of homework to watch

    @chucksenhowzen9740@chucksenhowzen97403 ай бұрын
    • Better get an A+ on the homework. Or else you'll be racist, sexist, and not a real fan

      @aidens4669@aidens46693 ай бұрын
    • @@aidens4669 wouldn't getting good results in today's age be classed as racist 🤔..

      @gazzisright7362@gazzisright73623 ай бұрын
    • "Its not meant for you!" Lol

      @hellomynameisbob922@hellomynameisbob9223 ай бұрын
    • ​@@gazzisright7362 in real actual productive school yes, but if you fail the woke mob, then no

      @aidens4669@aidens46693 ай бұрын
    • I hear "Multiverse" and it's an automatic "NO!"

      @selljdknight4633@selljdknight46333 ай бұрын
  • 6:41 "At a certain point it becomes a complete waste of time to care about anything that happens in those movies because the next one's probably just going to undo everything you just saw." Now you've gotten to the heart of it. People not caring is the point. Destruction and demoralization is the point.

    @Yesica1993@Yesica19933 ай бұрын
    • *N I H I L I S M*

      @razorback9999able@razorback9999able3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@razorback9999able it's not N I H I L I S M or any of that high horse psycho philoso mumbo crapjack. It's a VERY SIMPLE writing 101 fact that if you want the reader invested, you need to create viable emotional stakes. Take the story of 3 piggies: if the wolf brings down their house, it's going to eat them and they're going to die. You add 2 scenes at the beginning to make the piggies likable, so the viewership cares they actually survive the predicament. The caring drives them to want to come see if they prevail in movie #2 as well. Now write 3 Piggies Reloaded where the Wolf actually wins and eats the piggies, but Gemberello Khacussion Crystal from Dimension Qookeay, brought by Queatcoatl Menelegemo re-sets the timeline and returns the piggies and we end where we began. Well now the stakes are gone, the viewership is confused and they sure as heck don't want to see your 3 Piggies Resurrection where we learn we are going to get the same story as in #1 only with old pigs doing same stuff as in #1 and #2 only with even more confusing names, events, dimensions, timeline retcons, especially after you announced that after #3 you are scraping the whole "universe" and starting over (Aquaman in a nutshell). I mean, tl; dr: the purpose of a story is to make the reader/viewer feel like they've been on a grand adventure, accomplished something and learned something in the process. That there IS the product; those THREE things - not 2/3, not 1/3, ALL 3/3. You fail at that, you fail at storytelling. What I described above is failing to deliver at "accomplished something".

      @codinghusky5196@codinghusky51963 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. It is an easy way to turn young people into passive,nihilist,violent prone idiots,ready to enlist for a war against anyone who stands up and confronts the "system". Scifi has become a propaganda tool that creates a void in the heads of the fans,instead of the "old" scifi that had as a mission to doubt the status quo . Young people need to watch your videos in order to start questioning "the Message".

      @georgesos@georgesos3 ай бұрын
    • They did it because the comics have done it for a very long time, you absolute schizoid.

      @MagcargoMan@MagcargoMan3 ай бұрын
    • The brains of far leftists that infest Hollywood

      @DJRockford83@DJRockford833 ай бұрын
  • The only time a character can come back from death is as a ghost. Sort of. There's other instances but I'm specifically thinking of Mia Fey from Ace Attorney, who is very much dead and limited to the two characters who can channel her through their spirit medium powers. She is an immense help to Phoenix, but eventually she is no longer channeled and left to death in peace. Her death is a terrible blow and she can't be channeled at first either; her sister, Maya, has to work hard to channel her and it's almost not until the very end of the first case that she manages it. After that case, Maya sometimes struggles to channel Mia, meaning that you can't rely on Mia to help you. I think that's one of the few times a character "comes back" and it works...

    @moonkiitty@moonkiitty3 ай бұрын
    • lol i wouldnt think id be seeing an ace attorney reference here

      @kaplingnag7267@kaplingnag7267Ай бұрын
  • Excellent video Drinke, which does what it says on the tin. I was thinking of Fringe as a Mulriverse example that worked really well.

    @Geckoboy1.0@Geckoboy1.03 ай бұрын
  • The best writing tip I've learned is this: Characters need a sense of death to make the reader feel the tension for those characters. And death doesn't have to be mortality. It can be death of their dreams, their freedom, etc. Like Drinker said. Characters' actions need stakes. Otherwise it's not worth watching or reading.

    @SvanMagic@SvanMagic3 ай бұрын
    • writing 101, not to say it isn't damn important!

      @boop004@boop0043 ай бұрын
    • That's one of the problems I've always had with prequels. There's zero tension when characters who are prominently featured in the original story are in the prequel and are put in what should be life or death situations. We know they're not in danger because they're in the story that takes place after.

      @sporkenste1n236@sporkenste1n2363 ай бұрын
    • That's why I completely reject all Star Wars stuff outside of the 6 Lucas films. If Darth Maul and Boba Fett and Palpatine didn't die, then what the hell is the point?!?! I say you only get to pull this crap ONCE in your series or franchise. And it had better be convincing.

      @bujharvard9313@bujharvard93133 ай бұрын
    • @@sporkenste1n236but you know every minor character that you don’t recognize is about to get the worst death

      @justinclayville8147@justinclayville81473 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@sporkenste1n236 Even a prequel can be good if it explores an interesting facet of a characters development but again, it requires a great writer to instill that sense of "death" because even if the character lives and you know that, as the OP stated it doesnt have to be a literal death at stake, it can be other stakes that are risked especially if the characters past is unexplored and the prequel is fleshing out their journey into what they would eventually become. A prequel, like the concept of a multiverse isn't necessarily bad, it depends on execution.

      @hectorzero8545@hectorzero85453 ай бұрын
  • One of my favourite shows, Farscape, had an episode that tackled this concept without even invoking time travel or multiverses. It's the episode where an alien probe scanned Crichton and produced a caveman version of him and version that was highly evolved from him. The evolved version was highly intelligent but turned out to have no feelings or compassion. All ounces of humanity were gone. The caveman Crichton turned out to be noble and self sacrificing despite being primitive. At the end they both die. The episode finishes with D'Argo trying to cheer up Crichton by saying the evolved version was only one of many possibilities that humanity become. And Crichton retorted that it's because it was a possibility that's why he's disturbed about it. That show seriously had some great writers, among other things.

    @kri249@kri2493 ай бұрын
    • That show is a hall of fame scifi masterpiece, its almost unfair to compare modern shows to it, its just soo far above them

      @Vihara2@Vihara23 ай бұрын
    • Shhhhhhhh, Disney might hear you and think "we need to buy and improve farscape for the modern audience."

      @heinzamatic@heinzamatic3 ай бұрын
    • That sounds very interesting. Never heard of Farscape before, but I'll check it out.

      @gustavohc18@gustavohc183 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for reminding me! I have all of Farscape on DVDs. I just have to start rewatching them. Its been too long. Man I love that show!!!

      @tolvana9895@tolvana98953 ай бұрын
    • Farscape is REALLY good!

      @Whitespliff@Whitespliff3 ай бұрын
  • Kind of surprised you didn't mention Farscape's "Different Destinations" since you've done an excellent video on it in detail. I'd put "Unrealized Realities" on the list as another good example of how a "what if" multiverse story can work really well AND have high stakes of 'unraveling reality' by grounding us in a single character's struggle.

    @Angrist17@Angrist173 ай бұрын
  • I liked movie multiverse projects and I’d absolutely be open to something like this again in the future. I think the problem is with the writers and NOT that the writers have the ability to cheat, like you might cheat in a video game. You can do very interesting and engaging things with the ability to cheat, but if you do not have the discipline to choose wisely and deliberately when you cheat, then it becomes uninteresting and you move on. It’s the way the multiverse is written, not the multiverse itself.

    @mendelson6052@mendelson60523 ай бұрын
  • When I watched the Loki series, in the beginning, one of the time jerks had a desk that had multiple and numerous infinity stones within one of the drawers. Loki found them and asked shockingly how did they get them. The time jerk reaponds by basically aaying that he just collected them and implied they were basically worthless. In that single scene, the entirety of the three full phases of Marvel movies and over a decade of story-building in a shared universe was made pointless. Not surprising by Disney.

    @LOL_Garrus@LOL_Garrus3 ай бұрын
    • Yep! That kinda pissed me off, too🙄 It is hollyWOKE, baby🤮

      @azzajames7661@azzajames76613 ай бұрын
    • The writers are absolute woke morons

      @FFSWTFisThis@FFSWTFisThis3 ай бұрын
    • all for some basic bitch joke that NO ONE laughed at.

      @swainblaine1609@swainblaine16093 ай бұрын
    • All for a throwaway joke. Why? Because these writers don't care about the story and they think we're stupid for caring.

      @donwhiteley3293@donwhiteley32933 ай бұрын
    • Isn't this kind of like a worf effect. Listen to how powerful we are, because these super powerful things mean nothing to us.

      @mavsworld1733@mavsworld17333 ай бұрын
  • I remember in the movie 'The One' where as he defeated other versions of himself their total power would divide among those left. It was a multiverse story but focused on an individual and it worked. it's about making an interesting story on concept, not about writing something and then trying to use the concept to shoehorn it in.

    @fidelperez4837@fidelperez48373 ай бұрын
    • It also had a limited set of universes. I think there were only like 125 versions of himself.

      @brombombadil@brombombadil3 ай бұрын
    • I was hoping someone would bring up that movie. I think about it nearly every time someone mentions multiverses.

      @TheGhostofDrinkersLiver-ol3yu@TheGhostofDrinkersLiver-ol3yu3 ай бұрын
    • Jet Li and early Jason Statham. Yes, it was a decent, fun movie.

      @tonygreenfield7820@tonygreenfield78203 ай бұрын
    • I like The One, but that movie has problems too. If one of the two final Jet Li's have a kid, then wouldn't that kid be the only version of that person? Would that kid be super powerful? If the evil Jet Li dies in prison would the universe explode since there is only one Jet Li left?

      @AyumuNarumi75@AyumuNarumi753 ай бұрын
    • A six pack of beer + this movie = excellent fucking night

      @666xMajor@666xMajor3 ай бұрын
  • This did a fantastic job of explaining why multiverse and time travel stories can be so unsatisfying, with a cogent explanation of how to do those right as well--to serve the main storyline, not subvert it.

    @LaomedonIlliaris@LaomedonIlliaris3 ай бұрын
  • People get this now waay too late, while some of us complained about it since Endgame. It removes pretty much all stakes and opens the door for some lazy writing.

    @bobby4tw@bobby4tw3 ай бұрын
  • The first guy to put the multiverse in a story was Michael Moorcock (unfortunate surname). Central to his works is the concept of an Eternal Champion, who has many avatars across multiple dimensions. The Eternal Champion is a doomed figure, destined to keep the balance between Law and Chaos, no matter the cost. What I love is that the writer took the concept of the "tragic hero", along with several other common tropes, and turned it into a metaphysical concept for his writing. The Eternal Champion saga tells the story of a guy/girl destined to save the Earth, but each story has a different protagonist and cast of characters, setting, time period, and all versions of Earth are different. The stories are structurally simmilar, but they all vary in tone, genre and ideas, so they never feel stale (and yes, there is an occasional crossover here and there). The fact that Hollywood managed to make a concept with that many possibilities STALE so quickly is more impressive than anything.

    @astern.7425@astern.74253 ай бұрын
    • He must have had a tough time in school

      @matthewlacey4198@matthewlacey41983 ай бұрын
    • ​@@matthewlacey4198probably at that time, the vocab didn't degenerate enough for the kids to play around with it lol

      @jefflight8188@jefflight81883 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jefflight8188play around with what? _🤨_

      @mikeoxmall69420@mikeoxmall694203 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jefflight8188 You sweet summer child.

      @stevenschnepp576@stevenschnepp5763 ай бұрын
    • For anyone wondering about Moorcock, he is best known for Elric of Melniboné (one of the Eternal Champions), the White Wolf. If you like The Witcher then Elric is the original which Sapkowski was happy to plagiarize large sections from. Also, the very famous Chaos symbol that Warhammer loves to throw around is one for one taken from Moorcock, of course they never compensated Moorcock for it, but don't worry Games Workshop will do anything to stop you from profiting from anything remotely related to "their" IP.

      @nerofl89@nerofl893 ай бұрын
  • Man, the Ace Rimmer character study is a perfect example of why I love this channel. Some of the best examples of storytelling are those on obscure low budget TV shows that Hollywood executives can't wrap their greasy paws around.

    @Orice11@Orice113 ай бұрын
    • Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast!

      @AnnoyingMoose@AnnoyingMoose3 ай бұрын
    • Oh they tried... There was an unaired (or ONLY the pilot episode aired then canceled...) pilot episode made for the American audience, but the yanks couldnt get their heads around it. It had the original Kyton actor, and Teri Farrel (Jadzia from Star Trek DS9) as a gender swapped Cat. Look long enough and you can find it on KZhead.

      @zarekshadowmoor9263@zarekshadowmoor92633 ай бұрын
    • Red Dwarf is hardly obscure

      @Jabber-ig3iw@Jabber-ig3iw3 ай бұрын
    • @@AnnoyingMoose No one could surf on a crocodile like Ace Rimmer. What a guy!

      @Orice11@Orice113 ай бұрын
    • @Jabber-ig3iw Maybe it has a wider reach than I'm aware of. I'm 31 and most people in my circles haven't heard of it, despite me being a big fan of the show (not counting Back to Earth 👀). But I'm sure you get the point I was trying to make.

      @Orice11@Orice113 ай бұрын
  • The best example of multiverse I've encountered is from Micheal Moorcock with his Eternal Champions. Elric of Melniboné, Lord Erekosë/Count Ulrik Skarlsol, Duke Dorian Hawkmoon von Köln, Corum Jhaelen Irsei, Queen Ilian of Garathorm and many others. Each character a separate person but the same "soul" is shared, they are different incarnations of the one being, the champion of the Cosmic Balance. They exist in different universes and different times and for the most part are unaware of who they are in the grand scheme of things or other incarnations, though on some rare occasions the Balance requires some incarnations to come together to defeat some great peril to the Balance.

    @sarvolfe6435@sarvolfe64353 ай бұрын
    • Yes I adore the tale of the Eternal Champion series. Moorcock did it best.

      @ZamWeazle@ZamWeazle3 ай бұрын
  • Heyyy, I love you for mentioning Red Dwarf. Great video!

    @barazara@barazara3 ай бұрын
  • It’s really sad that Filthy Frank of all people can make a more consistent and compelling story than Hollywood.

    @rickyrackey7930@rickyrackey79303 ай бұрын
    • I rather him than woke Hollywood who removed all writers and people who didn’t follow woke movement

      @Jeffro5564@Jeffro55643 ай бұрын
    • @@Jeffro5564 Don’t use that word tho It’s meaningless.

      @rickyrackey7930@rickyrackey79303 ай бұрын
    • @@rickyrackey7930 You're damn right "woke" is meaningless. I've never seen a neologism flip through so many definitions in such a (relatively) short timespan. 🤦‍♂️

      @JohnGardnerAlhadis@JohnGardnerAlhadis3 ай бұрын
    • Also, Filthy Frank knew when to stop while things were good, unlike Marvel, who *really* should've stopped after _Endgame._

      @JohnGardnerAlhadis@JohnGardnerAlhadis3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@rickyrackey7930 Woke is more socially acceptable than gay though.

      @jffry890@jffry8903 ай бұрын
  • Writers have violated the Law Of Consequences. People want to ignore that our decisions have consequences. You can feel it in movies and in society.

    @risingphoenixbronco5328@risingphoenixbronco53283 ай бұрын
    • A bit like life in that regard.

      @terrylandess6072@terrylandess60723 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I can, it's grating on me like someone is constantly flicking you in the ear when you're trying to do something. And when you turn and punch them in the face for it, they scream and cry victim then you get punished for it. You are supposed to just sit there and take that ear flicking, you can't retaliate or make them stop because that's wrong. But they always act shocked when people say NO MORE to them.

      @animeangel1983@animeangel19833 ай бұрын
    • Especially in society,people ignore bad decisions have bad consequences.

      @user-be7tc2bd6e@user-be7tc2bd6e3 ай бұрын
    • 100% true

      @facelessandnameless@facelessandnameless3 ай бұрын
    • Probably has something to do with the fact that there are more female writers and directors now… makes sense when you understand that women seem to be innately allergic to accountability 😅

      @facelessandnameless@facelessandnameless3 ай бұрын
  • You just reminded me again of Nic Cage and Tea Leoni in Family Man. That’s a nice “Wonderful Life” kind of multiverse story.

    @afterthemourningtube@afterthemourningtube3 ай бұрын
  • THANK. YOU. Time travel already usually stressed me out and then all this multiverse crap started happening all the time and it is literally too much for me! Not only is it way more than I want to think about on a Friday night, but it's also emotionally exhausting. Like bro, it makes me anxious enough worrying about one universe, please don't bring in a million others (looking at you Spider-Man 2099). At this point when the stakes are so high, I automatically go into survival mode and disengage.

    @Jessica_Jones@Jessica_Jones3 ай бұрын
  • The matrix example to me was more of an example of power creep. Neo became so powerful in the previous movie that Smith no longer stacked up and became less of a threat. Now the only way to write a good antagonist is to make a new one who is even more powerful or give the old one a new trick that makes him more of a match again.

    @darrencurry4429@darrencurry44293 ай бұрын
    • I agree, it actually makes him more frightening because no one is safe from his body stealing. Not to mention he manages to escape the matrix.

      @dinguloid@dinguloid3 ай бұрын
    • The Matrix sequels never needed to be made. The story was complete. But.. money talks. And they diluted an excellent standalone movie to a weaker trilogy. (we don't acknowledge there was ever a 4th....)

      @zKaltern@zKaltern3 ай бұрын
    • The Matrix: Nobody who has faced an agent has lived to tell the tale. - Morpheus Matrix Reloaded: Everyone's beating up agents.

      @secondchance6603@secondchance66033 ай бұрын
    • Matrix 2 & 3 simply destroyed the memory of the excellent first film, which did not need any sequels. Money-grabbing ventures for fanboys.

      @spervuurproduksies@spervuurproduksies3 ай бұрын
    • @@secondchance6603 That’s a great point and a much better example of what the drinker is trying to point out.

      @darrencurry4429@darrencurry44293 ай бұрын
  • One of the things about the early seasons of Game of Thrones was that the audience was convinced any character could and would be killed off, and it could happen at any moment, such as the Red Wedding. That is one of the things that made those early seasons so gripping and compelling; there was no plot armour. The problem with multiverses is your main characters are an integral part of it all, so they have ALL the plot armour, and so the threat has to be watered down and then hidden under a pile of CGI and dramatic fights.

    @deaks25@deaks253 ай бұрын
    • This! 👆🏻

      @thomaspetrucka9173@thomaspetrucka91733 ай бұрын
    • Game of Thrones plot armour thing was kinda gimmicky in hindsight and ironically wasn't realistic if you know your history. Gotz the Iron Hand, John Mcafee and Christopher Lee of all people would be called unrealistic if they were fictional characters due to their insane accomplishments or bizarre life events, reality is stranger than fiction.

      @Stryker98@Stryker983 ай бұрын
    • That is why I loved it when at the end Blondie flipped out on her dragon and had to be taken out, unlike all the crybabies who had a stroke.

      @partygrove5321@partygrove53213 ай бұрын
    • I'm actually really not a fan of how Game of Thrones and similar shows have radically altered the expectations of a decent portion of audiences regarding character deaths in most other TV shows. A vocal minority or plurality (not sure which) seem to think that any show that has any deaths, even the most occasional red shirts or once a season side characters dying, *MUST* start offing their main cast like its GoT. Hearing this a lot regarding the last season of Stranger Things, for example (and the many of main characters are still sort of kids, even if the actors aren't, due to the showrunners screwup, which makes the demand especially kind of fucked up).

      @GreyhawkTheAngry@GreyhawkTheAngry3 ай бұрын
    • Jon Snow and Arya Stark clearly had plot armor the entire show, though. No way those mfers were ever going to die

      @fanofgodjimindiva2497@fanofgodjimindiva24973 ай бұрын
  • You summed it up well with the idea of picard's tapestry and neo vs agent Smith.

    @bluemagicazure-knight7964@bluemagicazure-knight79643 ай бұрын
  • My two big problems are that they're used to bring back series that closed off nicely (the classic "toblerone" character/story arc), and they're used to answer criticism of obvious mistakes (i.e. this is *our* version). If it makes you feel any better, they will eventually get to their Barry McCaffery "two letters" point, and then Superboy will punch reality in the face or something to reboot the whole goddamned franchise.

    @alptigin5438@alptigin54383 ай бұрын
  • The movie "it's a wonderful life" is also another good example of an alternate time line. A man who thought his life meant nothing turned out it meant everything to the people around him.

    @DeMan300@DeMan3003 ай бұрын
    • Massive ‘ish’.

      @c1ph3rpunk@c1ph3rpunk3 ай бұрын
    • best movie that i watch every xmas

      @DiggetyDank@DiggetyDank3 ай бұрын
    • I came here to say this, but you beat me to it by an hour lol

      @rickosborne6521@rickosborne65213 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately, I think that’s getting a woke remake, too.

      @candiigurl7893@candiigurl78933 ай бұрын
    • That movie is beautiful and mostly timeless. I hope it's treasured for centuries to come.

      @NickOleksiakMusic@NickOleksiakMusic3 ай бұрын
  • The multiverse trope can be akin to classic television crossovers. It used to be a big event having two (or more) shows crossover and your favourite characters interacting. But now, the crossover has been stretched to every episode of every season that it lost its special significance.

    @randocalrissian1980@randocalrissian19803 ай бұрын
    • The idea itself is not bad at all. Multiverse concept is a great opportunity for cross-overs and also different versions of the same beloved character to meet, interact, and have interesting story-writing scenarios with. Perfect examples of the latter are No Way Home and Into the Spider-Verse The issue is that the idea has been played out now because of Marvel and DC’s Flash executing the idea very terribly

      @coomerslayer420@coomerslayer4203 ай бұрын
    • I still remember as a kid watching in awe the ben 10 and generator rex crossover that was amazing and a one and done thing

      @Philip7710@Philip7710Күн бұрын
  • Im so glad for the Red Dwarf reference! I haven’t seen it in years and it will be sooo much better use of time then most of today’s shows! Thanks for that Critical Drinker!

    @MrSailor36@MrSailor363 ай бұрын
    • I fully agree sir!

      @maruska13x@maruska13x3 ай бұрын
  • 10:00 I was waiting patiently until the end of the video to reference Star Trek TNGL Tapestry as a prime example of alternate realities done right. Should have known better than to doubt the drinker!

    @pyrotechc3h8@pyrotechc3h83 ай бұрын
  • Dear Drinker, Your observation on the pitfalls of raising stakes to a level to which we can't relate was summed up by one of Stalin's henchmen: "One death is a tragedy; one million deaths is a statistic." Frank.

    @frankberry6220@frankberry62203 ай бұрын
    • Awesome quote dude. Loved it.....

      @Geeklectica@Geeklectica3 ай бұрын
    • Aaaaaaand this quote is totaly fake btw. Neither Stalin or his people never said this.

      @awddawd6812@awddawd68123 ай бұрын
    • @@awddawd6812 aaaaand that doesn't take anything away from the meaning of the quote anyway, smartass.

      @powerbeard5653@powerbeard56533 ай бұрын
  • I’m reminded of Futurama - “So there's an infinite number of parallel universes?" “No, just the two."

    @benjaminwakefield9509@benjaminwakefield95093 ай бұрын
  • 11:26 For medical issues, i had to retired of studying my career for a whole semester. In general, i wasn't sure if being a lawyer was my thing, my grades were bad and i wasn't paying it enough attention. During that time outside the studies, i realized the importance of the career, the many ways i could help the people and my country and the oportunities it can gave me, so when I returned, i came back with the energy of a thunderstorm. I started enjoying and caryng what i was doing, almost got an institucional recognition for my grades and i feel better than ever in my life. Somethimes i wonder what would happen if i didn't stop studying during that semester. Maybe i would had quit the university, or continues sad, not understanding nothing and with low grades. Who knows, maybe my story will appear in a Marvel What If Chapter

    @rylack5608@rylack56083 ай бұрын
  • The star trek and red dwarf examples are good. It's the simple difference of using another reality to make a succinct point rather than as a trick to bring a character back to life. Red Dwarf was my favourute show as a kid (along with Bottom 😂). I always knew it was really great sci fi writing but i didnt realise until older how much they really explored the psychology of the characters. Rimmer had that Ace Rimmer episode and the 'back to reality' episode where he believed his world was a hallucination but his real self had a more successful brother who had the same lack of opportunities. Then there was that episode where they landed on a planet that terrorformed to rimmer's psyche. They really used the character to depict everything that can be fragile about the human condition. Clever stuff

    @chrisbirch4150@chrisbirch41503 ай бұрын
  • Jet Li's "The One" was the first instance of a multiverse that i can remember, and it's probably just nostalgia, but that movie was one of my childhood favorites.

    @Spencahhhhh@Spencahhhhh3 ай бұрын
    • By the time the plot gets going they are down to two

      @josephroach9793@josephroach97933 ай бұрын
    • It also has a definite end. It doesn't leave a massive franchise door open for other versions of him.

      @shakalaka5446@shakalaka54463 ай бұрын
    • I like how the evil jet li also has the same wife and she just goes along with him killing his counterparts over and over. He killed the good jet lis wife so if you think about it, he might have been killing her counterparts too. I dunno I remember liking the music.

      @VTsiFanfic@VTsiFanfic3 ай бұрын
    • It was a new take on the idea. The making of extra on the DVD has always stuck with me. Jet Li developed distinctive fighting styles for the good and bad versions.

      @WaywardPondering@WaywardPondering3 ай бұрын
    • I AM NOBODY'S BITCH... YOU, ARE MINE... I WILL BE THE ONE!

      @shreddedWheatz@shreddedWheatz3 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for saying so eloquently what many of us are feeling but unable to articulate the way you can.

    @johnbailey7038@johnbailey70383 ай бұрын
    • So it sounds like you guys don't wanna see characters that died 😂😂😂 yet you didn't want those characters to die anyway because you wanted to see more of them so which is it? wannabe critics are something else, no consistency in their arguments whatsoever.

      @FazeRustyNuts@FazeRustyNuts2 ай бұрын
  • Great dissection as always. And I love Tapestry as one of the best STNG episodes

    @seen921@seen9213 ай бұрын
  • One good example of recent multiverse use? Sonic Prime. All the different shards of the universe have different versions of our main characters, and they are wildly different due to how they grew up. One of the main conflicts of the show stems from Sonic - being the short attention span easy going guy he is - not realizing Nine is NOT the Tails he knew for many years, and giving him a false impression of friendship. We also get to see Rogue becoming a leader of a rebellion on a Sonic-less world, Knuckles being a selfish pirate, or Rose in one universe being a robot built by Eggman.

    @SwiftNimblefoot@SwiftNimblefoot3 ай бұрын
    • Omg Sonic Prime was so good. And I saw Nine's betrayal coming but the dialog and the way they did it was really compelling

      @noobmasterruben5167@noobmasterruben51673 ай бұрын
  • The whole multiverse thing happens because writers and execs are too weak, too lazy, too afraid to *let things end.* Somewhere along the way, letting something end became a taboo. No one wants to finish things in a weird, meta-commentary on the fears of our own mortality. Writing an ending means you can't milk the profitable IP any more, means you have to move on and try something new. And that is Kryptonite to a modern writer. Make endings great again.

    @MMDelta9@MMDelta93 ай бұрын
    • I don’t think it’s the writers. The problem is the money. Essentially these are less *stories* than parts of a franchise. It’s simply easier for a studio to half ass a story in a universe where showing the logo or the name is enough to pack the theater. And thus these things have become essentially meaningless and basically story fast food. I think the ultimate answer is to simply ignore franchises until they die. If slapping the Marvel logo on a junior high level script is no longer enough to clear a couple hundred million dollars in tickets, they’ll stop doing it. When Star Wars “Let’s destroy the universe and save it again” doesn’t make money, they’ll stop.

      @TheresaReichley@TheresaReichley3 ай бұрын
    • Analogy wise, this is Mattel with Fast and Furious Hot Wheels themes. Minus the cars that have yet to be cast, Mattel won't let the FnF cow die after milking it for so long. (Not helped by how many reruns of certain vehicles from that franchise.)

      @valutaatoaofunknownelement197@valutaatoaofunknownelement1973 ай бұрын
    • Agreed.

      @matityaloran9157@matityaloran91573 ай бұрын
    • It's hard to 'end' something an ending was never written for - like a soap opera - they just keep jumping around looking for the best viewer response and then write to that. It ends when they think they aren't being watched enough, usually without closure.

      @terrylandess6072@terrylandess60723 ай бұрын
    • Which is weird, I've found that killing my characters off is the most fun thing about writing them.

      @cousinzeke4888@cousinzeke48883 ай бұрын
  • My favorite use of time travel and multiple dimensions is from Star Gate: The episode in which alternate versions of the sg1 team travel to our universe instead of theirs Not only did it give us the audience a chance to see Dr. Fraser one last chance and say good bye but also to see SG1 at their absolute lowest and desperation to do anything to save themselves. The other was the episode where a guy was trying to use an ancient failed to see his wife one last time. Has the most gut punching line ever from Jack of all people.

    @mikeheckman7882@mikeheckman78823 ай бұрын
    • I've watched it with my daughter a few years back, and, what we got at the the end was that the SG1 team we followed were like the 5th or 6th iteration of the original characters because of all the timeline changes and such that happened throughout the series. An example is the fish in Jack's lake, for one. It was sad, but really well executed!

      @EricCabana-cj6se@EricCabana-cj6se3 ай бұрын
    • I’m just here to kree

      @jonathanpike6614@jonathanpike66143 ай бұрын
    • Multiverse was also a theme in season one ep18 'there but for the grace of god" Daniel finds a mirror device and ends up in another universe with info gained from that saves his earth while the one he went to is taken over by the goa'uld.

      @aural_escape@aural_escape3 ай бұрын
    • Yeah that was a good use of multiverse, showing how bad things will get if they don't lift their game.

      @Redeye308350@Redeye3083503 ай бұрын
    • Ive found enjoyment in books recently that often has multiverses in them (beastborne) though time travel can also be a minefieldvwhere if done well its great but done badly it sucks (pyre souls) and reborn apaclypse being good examples

      @Someone-lg6di@Someone-lg6di3 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely nailed it with the Ace Rimmer comparison 👍

    @jonroads8281@jonroads82813 ай бұрын
  • I’ll subscribe. Truth speaks volumes. Thanks for taking a look into it.

    @phillipteems6617@phillipteems66173 ай бұрын
  • Stargate SG1 and Stargate Atlantis did multiverses quite well. They used them to show how far the characters would go to actually save earth when it really came down to the wire. My favorite episode of Stargate Atlantis is the second to last episode of the show. It's all about the lead character set in an alternate universe where he's down on his luck, failing at a job he doesn't seem to be passionate about, and just isn't doing great personally. But then, through a murder case he's working, he's told about an alien that's come to earth to destroy the planet, and the government can't track it down. He's told by a character who previously travelled to the main universe the show is set in, about the version of him who is the show's protagonist. Partly inspired by his alternate version, and partly because that is who he was all along, be sacrifices himself to stop the alien and dies at the end of the episode. It's exactly what multiverses should be used for. Showing exactly who your character is at the core, no matter what the circumstances of his life have been.

    @considerablyirked5746@considerablyirked57463 ай бұрын
    • Great example. Although SG1 started out cheesy, it got better and I grew to love it, but overall I really liked Atlantis better, the setting and characters were awesome. Both shows had very heartfelt moments (Rodney's deteriorating IQ), hilarious situations (Jack and Teal'c stuck in a time loop), and memorable characters (Todd the Wraith). II still like to rewatch both shows every couple years, they're still certainly better than what we get now.

      @vormina9808@vormina98083 ай бұрын
    • @@vormina9808 I preferred SG1 to Atlantis, but 'Vegas' was a better example than any of the parallel earth episodes in SG1. Except maybe when Daniel goes through the mirror or '2010' when future SG1 dies to save their past selves from the Ashen. I think the reason I like SG1 better is because I think the main cast all work fantastically individually, as well as in the group. In Atlantis, they work much better as a group than on their own. At least, Teyla and Ronin do. Also some of the writing with Teyla and her baby was pretty bad. But they're both such fantastic shows honestly. I love that they had a place for comedy and serious SciFi without taking themselves too seriously or poking too much fun at themselves. You also really get the sense of how passionate everyone involved in the shows was about making them. TV just isn't like that anymore, sadly.

      @considerablyirked5746@considerablyirked57463 ай бұрын
    • There's a reason Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis are my favorite shows. Then the writers decided to do exactly what they joked about in episode 200 and killed the third Stargate show before it got off the ground.

      @SvanMagic@SvanMagic3 ай бұрын
    • Man i miss stargate , SG1 and Atlantis got me through college lol

      @RogueHero@RogueHero3 ай бұрын
    • Tok'ra Kree Shova

      @tennooperator8182@tennooperator81823 ай бұрын
  • I remember reading Choose Your Own Adventure books as a kid, and keeping so many fingers in so many pages because I was unable to commit to a decision. Seems that is what these execs are doing - unable to cut off any possibilities by committing to just one. "Decide" by the way, means 'to cut away'. No cutting means no decision.

    @stuartblack7002@stuartblack70023 ай бұрын
    • Pretty much every text adventure is a Choose Your Own Adventure, and every Twine game. I like Sorcery 2. You can go forward, but never go back.@@ThomasGarman

      @stuartblack7002@stuartblack70023 ай бұрын
  • Antagonist Dilution is essentially just a subset of Power Creep, one of my least favorite common story occurrences. The seemingly massive previous stakes get retroactively ripped up when each successive threat increases by an order of magnitude. A good writer would find ways to create new threats for a "the one" Neo - make the agents more clever, the machines try to hunt his real body as he dominates in the Matrix (making each Matrix mission a race), new agents are designed not to be astronomically more powerful but with counters to things Neo can do, etc - but that requires more work and discipline.

    @redsoxu571@redsoxu5713 ай бұрын
    • A vast majority of anime are guilty of this and it is very jarring. Every season is a massive powerup and everyone from the seasons prior is now irrelevant.

      @Philip7710@Philip7710Күн бұрын
  • This is like the equivalent of saying that gaming is dead whilst only playing cod and fifa lmfao watch more movies pls

    @skateplays8880@skateplays88803 ай бұрын
  • I was so stoked when I first heard about Marvel's idea of a multiverse. Now, if I never see another superhero movie, it'll be way too soon.

    @FatNorthernBigot@FatNorthernBigot3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-wk2rw7le3mit definitely won't. Even if it's good one good movie won't bring back the fans their last 10 TV shows and movies chased away.

      @shadowsmith841@shadowsmith8413 ай бұрын
  • Am I the only one that remembers Jet Li's "The one" An awesome movie from the early naughties about a guy who goes around killing himself in other multiverses, getting stronger and faster each time he does. The finale being an incredible spectical. Great soundtrack also. It's how the MV should be used, to tell a good story, not to get out of a bad story in another movie. go watch it, it's low budget, corny fun and it's better than anything Marvel is pumping out these days.

    @bowser515@bowser5153 ай бұрын
    • Never heard about it. Sounds like an interesting story where multiverse is a tool to explore ideas and concepts. And that's how it should be.

      @ImperativeGames@ImperativeGames3 ай бұрын
    • A bit off the Highlander trope but with a different execution and amazing actor.

      @terrylandess6072@terrylandess60723 ай бұрын
    • @@ImperativeGames Definitely go give it a watch, it's worth it for the final fight scene alone!

      @bowser515@bowser5153 ай бұрын
    • Frickin awesome film.

      @RhysTurner-hr6yg@RhysTurner-hr6yg3 ай бұрын
    • I remember the movie very well, I have it on DVD and ended up watching while our internet was out for a few days last week. I was and kinda still am a Jet Li fan.

      @unseenunknown7664@unseenunknown76643 ай бұрын
  • The best use of time travel IMO is the movie “About Time”, simply beautiful.

    @eby61mss@eby61mss3 ай бұрын
    • I recommend "Frequenty Asked Questions About Time Travel", an underrated movie that illustrates the good and bad consequences of time travel.

      @caronstout354@caronstout3542 ай бұрын
  • I just love your videos…so eloquent and wise

    @Yaelia@Yaelia3 ай бұрын
  • Realized this problem when I was a kid with comics. Multiverses immediately removed any stakes or meaning for me and I gave them up.

    @mc-zy7ju@mc-zy7ju3 ай бұрын
    • Marvel published a series called What If? starting in the 70s. I think it worked because each issue was a one off story, like What If the Venom suit took over Peter Parker? And it had no effect on the main universe.

      @abeartheycallFozzy@abeartheycallFozzy3 ай бұрын
    • @@abeartheycallFozzyagreed 👍… Even the writers back then tactfully used the multiverse story arcs , didn’t over do it. They knew better. 👍

      @Michael-it7nx@Michael-it7nx3 ай бұрын
    • yeah lol once everyone can just magic or use a machine to jump to a different universe it kills the story

      @Ninja1Ninja2@Ninja1Ninja23 ай бұрын
    • @@abeartheycallFozzy I'm actually alright with alternate timelines as long as it's not overdone. They have consequences for the whole universe and not always for the better as shown with the Tapestry's example. What if's can be great thought experiments, but I'm glad they don't impact the main continuity.

      @mc-zy7ju@mc-zy7ju3 ай бұрын
    • You can create great drama and tension with the Multiverse. Even by raising the stakes. All it takes, as always, is Good Writing. Exemples : the Spider-Verse movies, Old Man Logan, the Avengers/New Avengers run by Jonathan Hickman (culminating with Secret Wars), The Dark Knight Returns, Superman Red Son...

      @rKhael53@rKhael533 ай бұрын
  • Finally someone has the courage to talk about the Street Fighter the movie multiverse. That Bisonopolis with a even bigger food court would have been EPIC!

    @torsten89@torsten893 ай бұрын
    • Of course!

      @minakoarisato1506@minakoarisato15063 ай бұрын
    • No, it would have been Tuesday

      @Weazel1@Weazel13 ай бұрын
    • raul julia is the main reason to ever watch that turkey :)

      @dercooney@dercooney3 ай бұрын
    • @@dercooney Bison/Vega wasnt supposed to be a fun guy but Raul Julia immortalized it. Great cast choice back then.

      @LtCommanderTato@LtCommanderTato3 ай бұрын
    • A bigger food court??? Game… OVER!

      @jonathanpike6614@jonathanpike66143 ай бұрын
  • Ah love Red Dwarf getting a shout in this one! Nice one Drinker!

    @PicturesOnMyMind@PicturesOnMyMind3 ай бұрын
  • You comments on Failure making a person or breaking a person was very good.

    @BlackWingedSeraphX@BlackWingedSeraphX3 ай бұрын
  • I always go back to Rick and Morty when multiverses come up. Whatever you think of the show, one of it's best running jokes is how pointless everything is in a multiverse of infinite possibilities. People you save die infinite times in other universes, and people you kill are alive in other universes.

    @thectk1000@thectk10003 ай бұрын
    • of course we get to watch the Rickest Rick,

      @NormanBlanton@NormanBlanton3 ай бұрын
    • Of course with the Omega now established people can really die in every universe so there are actual stakes now for the future

      @Snowqueenelsaofficial992@Snowqueenelsaofficial9923 ай бұрын
    • I was always a fan of the interdimensional TV concept.

      @ninjaStalker069@ninjaStalker0693 ай бұрын
    • MULTIVERSE OVERDONE.

      @brandonscott5544@brandonscott55443 ай бұрын
    • Rick and Morty is an excellent case study on the entire concept of multiverses. The second and third seasons are at their peak, because they take the logical consequences of a multiverse to their extremes and play with them in the most absurd ways - However, in Season 4 and up, Rick is basically a god-like entity, and at some point the humor can't sustain itself anymore. "Everything's pointless, we're all gonna die anyway" may be funny once, but it get's old and stale eventually. The episodes are funny every now and then, but they often feel by the numbers, and lack that absurd genius that the first seasons had.

      @georglehner407@georglehner4073 ай бұрын
  • Multiverses can also serve as metaphors when they present thematic questions. In EEAAO, the concept refers to a dispute where every family member isn't happy with the decisions made by themselves and others. However, the protagonist realizes that everyone suffers and feels the same way that drives her to use the power of the multiverse to see problems and resolve them with kindness. This permits her to find meaning in life and appreciate her own universe despite its ups and downs.

    @PizzaLover429@PizzaLover4293 ай бұрын
    • Why can't you just write out the show name you nerd?

      @tgd02@tgd023 ай бұрын
    • What the hell is EEAAO?

      @jimbobjunior.@jimbobjunior.3 ай бұрын
    • @@jimbobjunior.I’m assuming the comment is referring to the movie Everything Everywhere All At Once

      @franciscohernandez3648@franciscohernandez36483 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jimbobjunior.Everything Everywhere All At Once most likely

      @SamPuckett-ny5gc@SamPuckett-ny5gc3 ай бұрын
    • So in the end it wasn't about the multiverse, it was about the multiverses we multiversed along the multiverse.

      @Sneakyboson@Sneakyboson3 ай бұрын
  • In the vast infinite multiverse there are an infinite number of worlds where hollywood execs and directors would've seen this video and taken Drinker's advice to heart. Sadly I've a feeling that our universe isn't one of them.

    @sekijokes451@sekijokes4513 ай бұрын
  • Great example of stakes and loss is losing Jackie in Cyberpunk. You only know him in game for maybe an hour or two but you feel like you’ve known him forever and so being unable to prevent his death or save him causes a genuine sense of loss and grief. Hell, I actually cried when he died. As much as I’d love to be able to save him, just randomly yoinking him from another universe would make me genuinely angry because it’s an insult to such a great character

    @jhetttiernan2623@jhetttiernan262310 күн бұрын
  • Unlike most films that use the Multiverse trope, the Drinker always delivers the goods.

    @chance_ondriezek99@chance_ondriezek993 ай бұрын
  • I was watching Last Action Hero and never realized that movie gave us a couple of firsts. The scene when he walks in the police station is our first taste of the multiverse. When he gives Hamlet a little spice. That was our first taste of adding some modern flair to period pieces. Like Knights Tale and Luhrman's Romeo and Juliet. But back then we didn't beat a good idea to death. 😊

    @vivianworden2706@vivianworden27063 ай бұрын
    • I'm starting to wonder if both entitlement and 'been there - seen that' has had an effect that will be hard to overcome.

      @terrylandess6072@terrylandess60723 ай бұрын
  • Films in general have a problem killing characters off, making the stakes of any battle meaningless. Take PoTC Barbossa: Dies in CoTBP - returns in DMC - Dies again in the 5th movie (which was so bad I can't remember its name). Jack Sparrow: Dies in DMC - returns in AWE. Will Turner: Dies and returns in AWE. Not only that, the price he paid in AWE is undone entirely in the 5th movie. Davy Jones: Dies in AWE. Returns in the epilogue of the 5th movie. Marty and some of Jack's old crew: Supposedly killed by Blackbeard in OST - return in the 5th movie. This creative laziness leads to stagnation as no room is created for new characters to develop their own story. You just end up with an overcrowded narrative which is harder to follow. On top of that, when you finally decide to kill a character off, it means absolutely nothing as you've already seen it happen to that character before.

    @MattGP01@MattGP013 ай бұрын
  • That Star Trek: TNG episode with Picard is one of my favorite Star Trek episode of all time, from any series. The message was so well presented and portrayed, like the writers were trying to pass on important life lessons for EVERY viewer.

    @Mobri@Mobri2 ай бұрын
  • I love watching writers create a whole new universe, where they still can't write. Neat.

    @moerockha625@moerockha6253 ай бұрын
    • You silly goose. Modern Hollywood writers don't CREATE anything, lol.

      @st0nedpenguin@st0nedpenguin3 ай бұрын
    • In some universes, there are constants.

      @predaprime@predaprime3 ай бұрын
  • The Ace twist is one of the best I’ve ever seen and use it a lot in my own self-development. Another level of genius to it is that traumatic events in youth are called Adverse Childhood Experiences Coincidental or deliberate, it’s still incredible, and a perfect example of “show don’t tell”

    @j_h_gordy@j_h_gordy3 ай бұрын
    • And as Lister replied to show how he wasn't like Rimmer as he was made up for "Spanners"

      @barflyvoices468@barflyvoices4683 ай бұрын
    • Say booooo! 👎 At disney!

      @ihateentertainment@ihateentertainment3 ай бұрын
    • Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast

      @kingcosworth2643@kingcosworth26433 ай бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/Y7infLJrnJqMY6c/bejne.htmlsi=d_Rj9lQut2nY3W_2

      @ihateentertainment@ihateentertainment3 ай бұрын
    • what a guy!

      @bigbadallybaby@bigbadallybaby3 ай бұрын
  • Love the Red Dwarf reference! More please!

    @LEWIS1992@LEWIS19923 ай бұрын
  • I just watched Dave Cullen's video, sort of a followup {commentary?) to your vid on multiverses. You're both right!

    @brockobamagh1851@brockobamagh18513 ай бұрын
  • It's modern day nihilism manifested in entertainment. Really well put, Drinker.

    @ala4sox02@ala4sox023 ай бұрын
    • I don't think nihilism is usually the goal... I think, as Drinker argues, it's mostly ineptness and poor planning. "We've made a big mistake... how do we undo it?!" Case in point is the very famous 'twist' in Dallas where they made a whole season of the show into a 'dream sequence' because an actor who quit agreed to come back to the show and they had to un-kill him. Some think they contributed to the end of the show as people got mad.

      @Mereologist@Mereologist3 ай бұрын
  • _Tapestry_ is one of my favourite _ST:TNG_ episodes. Great writing, just enough humour, powerful Pat Stewart acting, and his humbling at the end, realizing he all but owed Q a debt of gratitude.

    @realbadger@realbadger3 ай бұрын
    • Mon capitan!!!

      @JimmyDoresHairDye@JimmyDoresHairDye3 ай бұрын
    • "Excuse me, is there a JON LUK PIKERD here?" 😂

      @user-ff8rs7gk6r@user-ff8rs7gk6r3 ай бұрын
    • Q is the best. Definitely one of the best characters.

      @poeticsilence047@poeticsilence0473 ай бұрын
    • I happened to come across that episode on TV when I was going through a difficult time in my life where I didn't know what to do with myself and it really touched my heart. That episode got me thinking about who I wanted to be and what I wanted to accomplish before I died. I pulled myself together and became a much more competent adult with a bright future. I'm glad that episode came around when it did.

      @Vianyte@Vianyte3 ай бұрын
  • Red Dwarf also had the excellent episodes about traveling to a Female-centric universe (Which was handled waaaaaaayyyyy better than any Hollywoke show or movie), and an alternate reality in which Christine Kochansky was the one in stasis, and Dave Lister was the hologram.

    @magellanthecat@magellanthecat3 ай бұрын
  • Two examples of the idea of a multiverse done well: Star Trek 1960s version “Mirror, Mirror;” and (coincidentally) the “quantum mirror” technology introduced in the Stargate SG-1 episode “There But for the Grace of God” in the late 90s. Both favorite sci-fi episodes that added real depth to characters by expanding the universes in which they exist, and providing greater insight into who they really are and what’s possible without losing any of the characters’ essential reality along the way.

    @stantheman9072@stantheman90723 ай бұрын
  • Multiverses is the new "found footage" genre. Very unique, but got so popular now everyone's using the gimmick to hide their shitty productions.

    @efe_aydal@efe_aydal3 ай бұрын
  • Loved the Red Dwarf shout out. That comedy show had way more depth and genuine insight than it gets credit for. The "Confidence and Paranoia" and "Inquisitor" episodes are also really great examples of TV that can get you thinking and feeling even as they make you laugh.

    @huwguyver4208@huwguyver42083 ай бұрын
    • Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast. 😁

      @gdonaldson26@gdonaldson263 ай бұрын
    • What a guy....

      @bjorn3438@bjorn34383 ай бұрын
    • He will never need a zimmer

      @john_reese@john_reese3 ай бұрын
    • 'Are you talking about what I think you're talking about?' 'What do you think I am talking about?' 'Playing pool....with planets!'

      @ArnoldJudasRimmer..@ArnoldJudasRimmer..3 ай бұрын
    • Give quiche a chance

      @secondstage4272@secondstage42723 ай бұрын
  • Incredible that there's a channel as popular as this one that revolves purely around film, run by a guy who doesn't seem to watch any movies outside of the comic book stuff and blockbusters

    @zsedzz@zsedzz3 ай бұрын
  • I feel like multiverses work much better in video games, where other worlds and servers are possible, giving a diverse incentive to explore the alternatives. Death in a video game usually means respawning, which could be taken at different approaches, such as roguelites where you respawn in a whole new environment each time, or certain branching story games can have consequence be used as alternative routes of play, giving the game replayable value.

    @ShizaruBloodrayne@ShizaruBloodrayne3 ай бұрын
KZhead