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MrCreeper187

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Everything posted by MrCreeper187

  1. hey can u remember me, MrCReeper187, i had a break for quite a while ,SOOO..welcome me back guys...dont be selfish! XDXD
  2. yeah gaming certifcates for water sports games rite?
  3. YOU DECIDE!!! WILL EVERYONE BECOME FAT FOR THE NEXT 20 YEARS!!!
  4. personnaly i LOOVE banana and honeydew
  5. does that mean my com can handle much more fps than the server could handle?
  6. everytime i get kicked by the server caying cvar com_maxfps=333. pls help me!!!!
  7. Haha you guys just wanna die with happiness....wait....sometimes if u get drunk you will get sad and die
  8. The source is http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest%2BNews/Showbiz/Story/A1Story20120531-349616.html
  9. Well no one has a legit pic tho so yeah....
  10. Which food will you take if you were stranded on a island? REMEMBER THERE IS NO FOOD ON THE ISLAND!!!!!!!!!!!!
  11. I love thos bottles as i breakém and smash it on a babies head Thanks for your info XD BUT DONT GET CONFUSED I WAS SAYING THE LOGO OF COCA-COLA NOT THE DRINK
  12. Add me guyz MrCreeper187
  13. well football is confused to be like american football or soccer..hence they call the sport witch you kick the ball around and shoot it into the goal is called Soccer
  14. Somebody gif me one?
  15. i personaly say the Rock
  16. Soccer Wrestling Track and field Swimming Basketball
  17. IT WAS GREEN BEFORE IT WAS RED....(thats all i know )
  18. i agree with nani, those who dont kow of this glitch will get killed by snipers on the crane and it will be an disadvantage for them.Even you kill them sagala,think about your teamates and friends who dont know about this glitch, the only way to win is teamwork
  19. i been waiting for the server called 1.6 abnerdog to fix the problem when i am playing it always says connection inturrupted
  20. i wish this works for xbox
  21. I have been having the problems too
  22. Well i haf encountered many people who go to Noshahr Canals and parachute on the crane and kill people using sniper Withput getting killed or seen.the only way to kill them is to snipe them back if you or lucky or shoot a rocket into it.DICE should just pacth the map and map it impposible to go on it. IF you want this glitch them vote on this poll
  23. Way back in 1979, Ridley Scott turned the science-fiction genre on its head, relocating the haunted house movie to a spaceship and in the process creating one of the most terrifying creature features ever committed to celluloid. The original Alien was a pretty straightforward horror film in which man does battle with nature’s most lethal predator, but it also left several questions hanging in the air, none more tantalising than the identity of the so-called ‘space jockey’ – a giant with an elephantine face and an enigmatic hole in his chest. More than 30 years on, Scott has decided to solve that mystery in Prometheus, revisiting the genre which made him famous to tell a grandiose tale that asks even bigger questions regarding who we are and where we came from. Following a stunning prologue that hints at the philosophical ambition to come, proceedings commence properly on the Isle of Skye in 2089, when scientist-couple Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Charlie Holloway (Logan Marshall-Green) discover a 35,000-year-old painting on a cave wall. Depicting men worshiping giant beings who in turn are pointing to the stars, the same image has apparently been found in countless cultures throughout the centuries, and the deeply religious Shaw immediately interprets it as an invitation to meet her makers. Cut to two years later, and the mysterious Weyland corporation has bankrolled a journey to said stars on the good ship Prometheus, the 17-strong crew winging their way to LV-223 in an effort to make first contact with these alien creatures, whom Shaw has by now christened ‘engineers’. She and Holloway both make the journey, but they are in the employ of Meredith Vickers (Charlize Theron), the cold, calm and collected Weyland representative whose frosty exterior causes her to be mistaken for a robot by one of her crew. But that position is taken up by synthetic human David (Michael Fassbender), the ship’s bleach-blonde man-servant charged with the task of looking after the humans while they slumber in hyper-sleep, but whose agenda becomes more ambiguous when they wake up. The rest of the team is peopled by a rag-tag team of genre stereotypes that includes a grumpy geologist who only wants to interact with plants and a trigger-happy security expert with a very big gun. But whereas the characters in the original Alien felt like they actually lived on the Nostromo, the Prometheus crew is given little time to convince the audience that they are anything other than broad caricatures; the kind of one-dimensional cannon fodder that would more likely be found wearing red shirts in a Star Trek movie than winning our sympathies in more serious fare. Unaware of what awaits them however, the crew excitedly embark on an expedition to the planet’s surface, ostensibly to investigate several huge structures that appear to have been made by something other than nature. But predictably there’s more to their mission than meets the eye, with Prometheus soon following the pattern of its predecessor; the crew encountering alien artefacts, making a form of extra-terrestrial contact, returning to their ship with a mysterious cargo, and all hell slowly but surely breaking loose. Yet this isn’t the out-and-out horror of the 1979 original, but rather something more cerebral. Granted there are alien creatures, though none that can compete with H.R. Giger’s remarkable monster designs from the original. The film also features a pair of truly terrifying sequences, one revolving around a couple of the expendables on the surface, another a repulsive piece of body horror that harks back to the franchise’s most famous scene. But Scott and screenwriters Damon Lindelhof and John Spaihts are more concerned with contemplating who these engineers are and what their existence means to mankind than actually showing them in action. Yet while the questions they ask early on in proceedings are intriguing, the great majority of them either fall by the wayside or aren’t satisfactorily answered. Worse still, the film is clumsy and heavy-handed when dealing with the twin-themes of faith and religion, the screenplay threatening to collapse under the weights it its own lofty theological ambitions in the final act. Scott is on steadier ground when it comes to the visuals however, with Prometheus a sumptuous feast for the eyes, no more so than when the science team is exploring the stunning alien vistas of LV-223. It’s the actors who bring this world to life however, and while the aforementioned supporting characters struggle to be noticed (aside from Idris Elbas’s hilariously sardonic ship’s captain) the three main players serve the material well. Charlize Theron is note-perfect as the tricky Vickers, keeping her crew and as a by-product the audience on their toes as her intentions become clearer and that icy exterior begins to crack. Noomi Rapace gives her a run for her money as Shaw however, the religious ying to Vicker’s more pragmatic yang, and as the carnage escalates, she effortlessly makes the transition from sensitive scientist to resolute (and somewhat Ripley-esque) warrior. But as ever these days, it’s Michael Fassbender who steals the show, delivering a marvellously understated and nuanced performance as David. The robot’s attempts at humour provide many of the film’s funniest moments, while his lack of empathy and emotion contribute some of the darkest, with Prometheus truly taking flight whenever he is onscreen. Fassbender’s performance elevates what is an already entertaining sci-fi, but unfortunately proceedings never quite hit the dizzy heights of Alien, or its equally brilliant sequel Aliens, lacking the claustrophobic tension of the former, and the all-out assault-on-the-senses of the latter. It certainly has more narrative ambition, and a hugely increased budget means that the scope is bigger and the effects better. But this prequel – and make no mistake, the events of Prometheus are a precursor to Alien – lacks the atmosphere and vitality of the 1979 film, with proceedings feeling strangely flat and lifeless for long periods. The climax is open-ended – including a coda that feels like it was tacked on simply to appease the fans – but one wonders if it would be wise for Scott to continue to mine this franchise for material. He’s already made a great Alien film, and now crafted a very good one in that same universe – the law of diminishing returns suggest that he should call time on this series and quit while he’s very much ahead. Chris Tilly is the Entertainment Editor for IGN in the UK and considers Alien to be the third greatest horror film of all-time. You can follow him on both Twitter and MyIgn. SRy for small words cuz no space -.-
  24. In the last moments of World War II, a secret Nazi space program evaded destruction by fleeing to the Dark Side of the Moon. During 70 years of utter secrecy, the Nazis construct a gigantic space fortress with a massive armada of flying saucers. When American astronaut James Washington (Christopher Kirby) puts down his Lunar Lander a bit too close to the secret Nazi base, the Moon Führer (Udo Kier) decides the glorious moment of retaking the Earth has arrived sooner than expected. Two Nazi officers, ruthless Klaus Adler (Götz Otto) and idealistic Renate Richter (Julia Dietze), travel to Earth to prepare the invasion. In the end when the Moon Nazi UFO armada darkens the skies, ready to strike at the unprepared Earth, every man, woman and nation alike, must re-evaluate their priorities.
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