I am so sorry that I missed yesterday's Sunday Sayings. I was so busy working and moving my sister out this weekend that I forgot all about it. So here you go:
[Warning: contains spoilers] This movie is set about three years after the last one, and Kirk is getting bored of all the exploration and peace missions. Luckily for Kirk this is a movie, so we know something big is going to happen. Kirk is also upset because his birthday is coming up, which makes him think of his father and what it means to live up to that legacy as well as make his own. Uhura and Spock are going through a rough breakup, so our main characters aren't in the best place emotionally. When they stop in Yorktown, Kirk asks to be promoted to a council job on base and to have Spock take his place as captain. Finally, our conflict begins. The Federation receives a distress signal from an alien whose ship has apparently malfunctioned, stranding her crew on the far side of the nebula, and the Enterprise is sent on a rescue mission. As they approach the planet, the crew is attacked by a small army of ships, the Enterprise is destroyed and the crew is scattered. Scotty mee...
[Warning: spoilers ahead] La La Land was not what I was expecting. It is a story about the desire to make it big in Hollywood. The plot is simple enough; an actress and a musician, both hoping to get their big breaks, repeatedly cross paths. At first they don't get along, but eventually (somewhat suddenly) they start a relationship. They slowly find more successful jobs, although they don't necessarily get what they want. Mia is doing what she wants, but barely getting by. Sebastian finds fame and success, but he is basically just a sell-out. One day their career paths take them in different directions. Jumping ahead several years, we see that Mia is now a very successful actress, and Sebastian owns the jazz club he always hoped to have. However, they are no longer together. And then, painfully, we are forced to watch them imagine what their lives would have been like if they'd never split up. The most upsetting part of this is that their lives are basically the same, exc...
While this show is so popular for its reinvention of classic fairy tales, talented actors, and well-written plots, the main idea behind Once Upon a Time is the theme of hope. The writers, Eddy Kitsis and Adam Horowitz say that the show is about hope, while their first show, Lost , was about redemption. I am sure that many others like myself have seen the redemption theme appearing in OUAT as well. Still, it is clear that the main message really is about having hope, faith, and belief, no matter the circumstances. The biggest example of this is with Snow White and Prince Charming. In all of their hard times, and whenever they are separated, they always have hope that they will find each other again. At the start of the show, they have no memories of each other, yet they have a special bond. Mary Margaret (Snow) takes the time to care for him at the hospital since no one knows who his family is, and it is when she reads their stories to him that he awakens. She had always hoped that...
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