That movie featured a guy going through open heart surgery requiring the removal of all or most of his sternum, recovering completely even when factoring in the likelihood that his body would reject an electromagnet connected to a car battery being installed in it, building a one-of-a-kind super powered electrical reactor using spare parts that were not meant for that use, going through another open heart surgery, recovering a second time (again with the added potential of his body rejecting the even more powerful electricity-generating piece of metal installed in it), then building a one-of-a-kind weaponized and bullet proof super armor suit from other spare parts that were not meant for that use and doing all of this in the first act while in an ordinary cave under the supervision of multiple guards that can't recognize any of these things happening and/or don't see any reason to intervene if they do.
That's pretty bad. Back punching surgery bad.
*Please note: I said nowhere that I thought any of the things you listed above in Into Darkness were plausible or made sense (in fact, my wife and I made fun of some of them ourselves), nor did I say that things in Star Trek (which we also made fun of) or Batman Begins made sense. Just getting that out of the way because, In the past, you seem to have had trouble grasping the difference between "this makes no sense but doesn't bother me" and "yes it does too make sense."
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-21 01:15 pm (UTC)That's pretty bad. Back punching surgery bad.
*Please note: I said nowhere that I thought any of the things you listed above in Into Darkness were plausible or made sense (in fact, my wife and I made fun of some of them ourselves), nor did I say that things in Star Trek (which we also made fun of) or Batman Begins made sense. Just getting that out of the way because, In the past, you seem to have had trouble grasping the difference between "this makes no sense but doesn't bother me" and "yes it does too make sense."