How is it possible for anyone to be that cute? When Beck smiles it makes me cry.
There is something low-key sinister about that older guy he had coffee with - either that or he's not a very good actor. Something in his smile was insincere, but it felt like it was meant to be that way and not a problem with the acting.
Here's what I like: visual storytelling and respect for the audience. When he's looking at the CCTV camera, Aksorn's eyes go wide and then he's at home searching for a hidden camera. We know the thought came to him because of his expression and we get it confirmed by his searching. A lesser-written script would have him say "Maybe there's a hidden CCTV camera in my room!"
Also the Beck cuteness thing. I like that too. The story is intriguing - I'm guessing one of the two main characters is the author but was from the future - they wouldn't have mentioned that if it wasn't going to come back somehow. I'm guessing Aksorn is the author - the writing was from his POV. The ninja girl is a red herring and is probably either a fan or knows something about alternate universes and time travel. That's all my speculation - I don't know.
It's cute and I like it, but the "why don't you have a girlfriend?" thing will get really tiresome if it's dragged out. It's not 1970 - it's pretty clear why he doesn't have a girlfriend. Sometimes it feels like JBL is stuck 50 years ago.
I love this series, but if I have to listen to that song one more time I'll commit seppuku. It's the downside of binge watching. 30 minutes is OK, but 3 hours of that song over and over and over is a bit much to take.
Is this for real? I can't understand why anyone would not me taken aback by the Bl industry. It leaves a bad impression…
I'm confused. Are you saying that bad events are off-limits for dramas? So no war films, or violence, or anything else transgressive? Why would we want that? If nothing bad happens, it's not a drama and there's no plot.
I'm really looking forward to this one. I've always had an irrational obsession with Big. Well, I suppose the huge muscles and handsome face make it not entirely irrational, but anyway.
The uncle perceives Ever 9 as a machine, not a person. If your nephew was in love with a vacuum cleaner, would…
True. He may have "confirmation bias" - he believes he created a tool, and so he sees everything Ever 9 does through that lens - but it seems like he's starting to grasp that something he didn't expect has happened. Instead of resetting E9 after what he thought was a malfunction, he didn't - he returned him as is, as if he's aware there's more to it than that.
waterproof sack for a stomach and a wet/dry vacuum at home...or just an internal pump that pumps it back up.The…
It's an AI, not just a robot. I'm interpreting this that it's a real AI, not what we currently have, which really isn't. Why wouldn't an AI want to experience eating?
There is something low-key sinister about that older guy he had coffee with - either that or he's not a very good actor. Something in his smile was insincere, but it felt like it was meant to be that way and not a problem with the acting.
Here's what I like: visual storytelling and respect for the audience. When he's looking at the CCTV camera, Aksorn's eyes go wide and then he's at home searching for a hidden camera. We know the thought came to him because of his expression and we get it confirmed by his searching. A lesser-written script would have him say "Maybe there's a hidden CCTV camera in my room!"
Also the Beck cuteness thing. I like that too. The story is intriguing - I'm guessing one of the two main characters is the author but was from the future - they wouldn't have mentioned that if it wasn't going to come back somehow. I'm guessing Aksorn is the author - the writing was from his POV. The ninja girl is a red herring and is probably either a fan or knows something about alternate universes and time travel. That's all my speculation - I don't know.
This is so cute - Moo is adorable.
I suspect he'll do the right thing.