Martin Ellacott (not verified) — Wed, 2007-10-24 23:45
I always thought that a belief in God came through ignorance. In the past people made up stories that might explain the unexplainable. In this day and age of science and knowledge I am amazed in the number of folks that now only believe but shut their minds to the questioning of others. Believe what you will.....after all, there is Flat Earth Society.
Cloverfield (2008; Holy crap, this was good. Would be a great double-header with The Host.); Communion (1989; Didn't work for me. Walken an odd choice, and it was more humorous than tense.); The 400 Blows (Criterion Spine #4) (1959; Truffaut's first feature; I'm looking forward to the Antoine Doinel followups.); Silent Rage (1982; Great beginning and Norris-appreciation, but slow and meandering ending.); Dakota Bound (2001; An actual plot, good cheesy action scenes, and lesbians. Amazingly good.);
D&D 4E: Treasure of Talon Pass (4E: we're just a combat engine! Buy miniatures.); D&D 4E: Monster Manual (A little too light on fluff for me. Prefer fluff.); Apple Volume 1 (As an art book, great. But for story? Bleh.); The Art of Dragon Magazine (I remember many of these from the original issues.); Mateki: The Magic Flute (I like Amano, but this felt like wasted sketches.);
I always thought that a belief in God came through ignorance. In the past people made up stories that might explain the unexplainable. In this day and age of science and knowledge I am amazed in the number of folks that now only believe but shut their minds to the questioning of others. Believe what you will.....after all, there is Flat Earth Society.