I think you just like disagreeing with me.....

Moderators: sgt.null, dANdeLION
Because that violates their rules. You may think their rules are wrong, even silly (nor will I particularly disagree) but the real world is full of people doing exactly that. How many Hindus let their children starve rather than kill and eat a cow?Cail wrote:Why send a blind girl (with two idiots who don't know the secret) to town? Why not send an elder who already knows what's going on?
She is blind, not stupid. She is clever, brave, fiercely determined, and has been given detailed instructions (that road helped a lot btw). She doesn't need to read any written signs, and if she's like blind folks I know her memory for little telling details would be highly developed--judging distances, for example. She would probably feel the sun in the sky and tell in which direction it was setting. She'd be able to backtrack the way she went with great accuracy, etc.Blind girl amazingly can find her way through the woods, and escape (and kill) a pursuer. Not only that, she finds her way back.
She has lived all her life with the awareness of Those-We-Do-Not-Talk-Of, and that has included descriptions of what they are like. She can touch something and recognize it as a claw. There is nothing else in her experience that has an appendage like that. This could have been set up better, sure, but it still works.Blind girl realizes the town's secret by walking into a shed and touching a "claw", which for all she knew could've been a piece of wood.
Don't even understand this one. Sorry. Why was it silly, given the premise of the flick?The modern-day greenhouse and the tarps were silly.
What makes you think he'd never gone out of that room before? And Ivy didn't try to hide her passage, including her wearing a yellow cloak. Noah is retarded, not totally witless. He can follow tracks, and he had over a full day to find Ivy in woods he already knew well. Why shouldn't he be able to catch up with her?How the hell did Noah get out of the room this time, but no others, and how in the hell did he find Ivy in the woods?
Ummmmm, it's "against the rules" for ANYONE to go to town. It makes no narrative sense to send the person with the least likely chance in the village. Gee, but it adds suspense to the movie and sets up.....Zahir wrote:Because that violates their rules. You may think their rules are wrong, even silly (nor will I particularly disagree) but the real world is full of people doing exactly that. How many Hindus let their children starve rather than kill and eat a cow?Cail wrote:Why send a blind girl (with two idiots who don't know the secret) to town? Why not send an elder who already knows what's going on?
Yes, she is blind and in the woods where she's never been before running full tilt without a cane or stick and miraculously doesn't smash into a tree and finds her way there and back. Sorry, that's just insulting to the audience.Zahir wrote:She is blind, not stupid. She is clever, brave, fiercely determined, and has been given detailed instructions (that road helped a lot btw). She doesn't need to read any written signs, and if she's like blind folks I know her memory for little telling details would be highly developed--judging distances, for example. She would probably feel the sun in the sky and tell in which direction it was setting. She'd be able to backtrack the way she went with great accuracy, etc.Cail wrote: Blind girl amazingly can find her way through the woods, and escape (and kill) a pursuer. Not only that, she finds her way back.