Wired has a gushing review of the Mad Max reboot:
Lightning rarely strikes twice, so going into Mad Max: Fury Road it's hard not to dwell on the words of Max Rockatansky himself: "You know hope is a mistake. If you can't fix what's broken, you'll go insane." The thing is, Max is wrong. Fury Road is everything fans could have hoped for.
It's also a very necessary movie right now. Fury Road is not only a reminder of what big, beautiful action movies can and should look like, it's a reminder that they can have a point. That spectacle can have substance. That, in a cinematic landscape where we're still fighting over the roles women get in movies, a new Ripley might just be waiting in the next trailer you see. (In Fury Road's case, that's Charlize Theron in a heart-stoppingly badass performance as Imperator Furiosa.)
Cars, guns, desert, and 1980's style post-apocalyptic fashion.
(Score: 2) by physicsmajor on Saturday May 16 2015, @12:38AM
1. Cute misdirection with a logical fallacy. I'm well and fully aware of the limitations and issues with the DSM. This doesn't in any way undermine my point, which stands: Psychiatry is very broad, and those who practice it see the full range of human experience.
2. More logical fallacies, which actually serve to make my point. Yes, the field of psychiatry extends beyond the DSM... so it's actually bigger than I stated. What were you trying to say? I don't think it's helping.
3. Eve has far more real world experience with this specific sub-field than the vast majority of, and quite possibly any, psychiatrist(s). Consider that we're talking about a fictional script here, so again I'm having trouble seeing how consulting a writer with extensive and intimate experience isn't the blatantly, obviously correct call.
Anything else I can help you with?