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#ark trooper jesse
astral-veil · 2 years
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just 501st being 501st
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clonememesfrikyeah · 3 years
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WHATS UP MY LOVELY RAT BITCHS AND BASTERDS I AM LISTENING TO CHRISTMAS MUSIC TO CURE MY DEPRESSION AND ITS WORKING DONT @ ME IM AWARE ITS NOT EVEN OCTOBER YET IM LATE FOR LAB SCHOOL CLASS STUFF BECAUSE I MADE THESE FOR YOU PLS ENJOY RESPONSAVLY OK BYE
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theoceanoasis · 3 years
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Going To The Bar
Kix was sitting at 79's with his brothers. Jesse was sitting next to him and having an arm wrestling contest with Fives.
Hardcase is trying to flirt with the waitress and is doing terribly. The waitress is giving him pitying looks. It's a little embarrassing to watch.
Tup and Dogma are talking to each other and Tup is starting to get a little drunk. He keeps asking Dogma to dance with him. While swaying in his seat with slightly glazed eyes. He is a total light weight.
He can see Rex drinking something strong and trying to forget all of them. He knows his brother likes hanging out with them, he just acts like he doesn't.
Echo is cheering Fives on and also making snarky comments. He can tell Jesse is getting annoyed by Echo's distractions. He smiles at his brothers and continues drinking. He's glad they finally got leave and are able to enjoy themselves.
He watches Tup pull out the puppy dog eyes and Dogma caves, while Tup starts cheering. He watches them leave for the dance floor and Rex is keeping a close eye on them.
Echo must notice because he talks about Rex being a mother hen. They all know Rex is a mother hen, but Fives and Echo are the only ones who can say that to Rex. Without having there butt's kicked the next day during sparring.
Rex ignores him and finishes off his drink. He looks like he could use another and asks the waitress for another drink. She happily goes to get him one and Hardcase pouts. While watching her quickly get away from him.
He watches Hardcase look at the captain and start complaining. Before getting distracted by Jesse who bumps into him while Fives cheers in victory. He pats his brothers back after loosing to Fives and offers to get him a drink.
Jesse looks over and smiles at him.
"You need to wake up."
"What?"
"I said please do."
He watches Jesse glare at Fives while feeling confused. He has no idea what just happened, but it puts him a little on edge.
Jesse nudges him and asks like nothing is wrong.
"Move over I have to use the bathroom."
Hardcase stops arguing with the captain and says.
"I'll join you."
Fives looks like he wants to say something that will probably start a fight. When Echo quickly stops him and points at the wolfpack.
"Let's go over there."
He watches Echo drag Fives away while smiling. Those two have so much energy and there both amazing Ark troopers.
He looks over at Rex who slides next to him. They are the only ones at the table.
"You need to wake up. Your in danger."
He stares at Rex and asks.
"What?"
Suddenly it was like everything skipped and Torrent was sitting around him. They we're joking and laughing while he looked confused. He didn't understand what was happening.
Fives looks over and asks.
"Do you remember the chips?"
Jesse turns to look at him.
"Do you remember?"
Echo nods.
"It was important."
Everyone at the table is watching him a and Dogma says.
"You need to wake up."
Tup nodded.
"Your in danger."
He looked at all of them while feeling really confused. He didn't understand what was going on. They we're at 79's and he wasn't asleep or in danger. He was with his brothers.
Echo stared at him and said.
"It's over we're gone now."
Rex nodded and was smiling while speaking urgently.
"Wake Up It's Not Safe!"
He looks around and gasps in horror because everyone was dead. He stood up and took a step back in surprise before waking up.
He walked out of the Carbonite feeling nauseous and collapsed onto the ground. When he finally looked up he didn't know where he was, but his brothers we're gone and he was all alone.
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letterboxd · 3 years
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In Focus: The Mummy
Dominic Corry responds on behalf of Letterboxd to an impassioned plea to bump up the average rating of the 1999 version of The Mummy—and asks: where is the next great action adventure coming from?
We recently received the following email regarding the Stephen Sommers blockbuster The Mummy:
To whom it may concern,
I am writing to you on behalf of the nation, if not the entire globe, who frankly deserve better than this after months of suffering with the Covid pandemic.
I was recently made aware that the rating of The Mummy on your platform only stands at 3.3 stars out of five. … This, as I’m sure you’re aware, is simply unacceptable. The Mummy is, as a statement of fact, the greatest film ever made. It is simply fallacious that anyone should claim otherwise, or that the rating should fail to reflect this. This oversight cannot be allowed to stand.
I have my suspicions that this rating has been falsely allocated due to people with personal axes to grind against The Mummy, most likely other directors who are simply jealous that their own artistic oeuvres will never attain the zenith of perfection, nor indeed come close to approaching the quality or the cultural influence of The Mummy. There is, quite frankly, no other explanation. The Mummy is, objectively speaking, a five-star film (… I would argue that it in fact transcends the rating sytem used by us mere mortals). It would only be proper, as a matter of urgency, to remove all fake ratings (i.e. any ratings [below] five stars) and allow The Mummy’s rating to stand, as it should, at five stars, or perhaps to replace the rating altogether with a simple banner which reads “the greatest film of all time, objectively speaking”. I look forward to this grievous error being remedied.
Best, Anwen
Which of course: no, we would never do that. But the vigor Anwen expresses in her letter impressed us (we checked: she’s real, though is mostly a Letterboxd lurker due to a busy day-job in television production, “so finding time to watch anything that isn’t The Mummy is, frankly, impossible… not that there’s ever any need to watch anything else, of course.”).
So Letterboxd put me, Stephen Sommers fan, on the job of paying homage to the last great old-school action-adventure blockbuster, a film that straddles the end of one cinematic era and the beginning of the next one. And also to ask: where’s the next great action adventure coming from?
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Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz and John Hannah in ‘The Mummy’ (1999).
When you delve into the Letterboxd reviews of The Mummy, it quickly becomes clear how widely beloved the film is, 3.3 average notwithstanding. Of more concern to the less youthful among us is how quaintly it is perceived, as if it harkens back to the dawn of cinema or something. “God, I miss good old-fashioned adventure movies,” bemoans Holly-Beth. “I have so many fond memories of watching this on TV with my family countless times growing up,” recalls Jess. “A childhood classic,” notes Simon.
As alarming as it is to see such wistful nostalgia for what was a cutting-edge, special-effects-laden contemporary popcorn hit, it has been twenty-one years since the film was released, so anyone currently in their early 30s would’ve encountered the film at just the right age for it to imprint deeply in their hearts. This has helped make it a Raiders of the Lost Ark for a specific Letterboxd demographic.
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Sommers took plenty of inspiration from the Indiana Jones series for his take on The Mummy (the original 1932 film, also with a 3.3 average, is famously sedate), but for ten-year-olds in 1999, it may have been their only exposure to such pulpy derring-do. And when you consider that popcorn cinema would soon be taken over by interconnected on-screen universes populated by spandex-clad superheroes, the idea that The Mummy is an old-fashioned movie is easier to comprehend.
However, for all its throwbackiness, beholding The Mummy from the perspective of 2020 reveals it to have more to say about the future of cinema than the past. 1999 was a big year for movies, often considered one of the all-time best, but the legacy of The Mummy ties it most directly to two of that year’s other biggest hits: Star Wars: Episode One—The Phantom Menace and The Matrix. These three blockbusters represented a turning point for the biggest technological advancement to hit the cinematic art-form since the introduction of sound: computer-generated imagery, aka CGI. The technique had been widely used from 1989’s The Abyss onwards, and took significant leaps forward with movies such as Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), Jurassic Park (1993) and Starship Troopers (1997), but the three 1999 films mentioned above signified a move into the era when blockbusters began to be defined by their CGI.
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A year before The Mummy, Sommers had creatively utilised CGI in his criminally underrated sci-fi action thriller Deep Rising (another film that deserves a higher average Letterboxd rating, just sayin’), and he took this approach to the next level with The Mummy. While some of the CGI in The Mummy doesn’t hold up as well as the technopunk visuals presented in The Matrix, The Mummy showed how effective the technique could be in an historical setting—the expansiveness of ancient Egypt depicted in the movie is magnificent, and the iconic rendering of Imhotep’s face in the sand storm proved to be an enduringly creepy image. Not to mention those scuttling scarab beetles.
George Lucas wanted to test the boundaries of the technique with his insanely anticipated new Star Wars film after dipping his toe in the digital water with the special editions of the original trilogy. Beyond set expansions and environments, a bunch of big creatures and cool spaceships, his biggest gambit was Jar Jar Binks, a major character rendered entirely through CGI. And we all know how that turned out.
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A CGI-enhanced Arnold Vosloo as Imhotep.
Sommers arguably presented a much more effective CGI character in the slowly regenerating resurrected Imhotep. Jar Jar’s design was “bigger” than the actor playing him on set, Ahmed Best. Which is to say, Jar Jar took up more space on screen than Best. But with the zombie-ish Imhotep, Sommers (ably assisted by Industrial Light & Magic, who also worked on the Star Wars films) used CGI to create negative space, an effect impossible to achieve with practical make-up—large parts of the character were missing. It was an indelible visual concept that has been recreated many times since, but Sommers pioneered its usage here, and it contributed greatly to the popcorn horror threat posed by the character.
Sommers, generally an unfairly overlooked master of fun popcorn spectacle (G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra is good, guys), deserves more credit for how he creatively utilized CGI to elevate the storytelling in The Mummy. But CGI isn’t the main reason the film works—it’s a spry, light-on-its-feet adventure that presents an iconic horror property in an entertaining and adventurous new light. And it happens to feature a ridiculously attractive cast all captured just as their pulchritudinous powers were peaking.
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Meme-worthy: “My sexual orientation is the cast of ‘The Mummy’ (1999).”
A rising star at the time, Brendan Fraser was mostly known for comedic performances, and although he’d proven himself very capable with his shirt off in George of the Jungle (1997), he wasn’t necessarily at the top of anyone’s list for action-hero roles. But he is superlatively charming as dashing American adventurer Rick O’Connell. His fizzy chemistry with Weisz, playing the brilliant-but-clumsy Egyptologist Evie Carnahan, makes the film a legitimate romantic caper. The role proved to be a breakout for Weisz, then perhaps best known for playing opposite Keanu Reeves in the trouble-plagued action flop Chain Reaction, or for her supporting role in the Liv Tyler vehicle Stealing Beauty.
“90s Brendan Fraser is what Chris Pratt wishes he was,” argues Holly-Beth. “Please come back to us, Brendaddy. We need you.” begs Joshhh. “I’d like to thank Rachel Weisz for playing an integral role in my sexual awakening,” offers Sree.
Then there’s Oded Fehr as Ardeth Bey, a member of the Medjai, a sect dedicated to preventing Imhotep’s tomb from being discovered, and Patricia Velásquez as Anck-su-namun, Imhotep’s cursed lover. Both stupidly good-looking. Heck, Imhotep himself (South African Arnold Vosloo, coming across as Billy Zane’s more rugged brother), is one of the hottest horror villains in the history of cinema.
“Remember when studio movies were sexy?” laments Colin McLaughlin. We do Colin, we do.
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Sommers directed a somewhat bloated sequel, The Mummy Returns, in 2001, which featured the cinematic debut of one Dwayne Johnson. His character got a spin-off movie the following year (The Scorpion King), which generated a bunch of DTV sequels of its own, and is now the subject of a Johnson-produced reboot. Brendan Fraser came back for a third film in 2008, the Rob Cohen-directed The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Weisz declined to participate, and was replaced by Maria Bello.
Despite all the follow-ups, and the enduring love for the first Sommers film, there has been a sadly significant dearth of movies along these lines in the two decades since it was released. The less said about 2017 reboot The Mummy (which was supposed to kick-off a new Universal Monster shared cinematic universe, and took a contemporary, action-heavy approach to the property), the better.
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The Rock in ‘The Mummy Returns’ (2001).
For a long time, adventure films were Hollywood’s bread and butter, but they’re surprisingly thin on the ground these days. So it makes a certain amount of sense that nostalgia for the 1999 The Mummy continues to grow. You could argue that many of the superhero films that dominate multiplexes count as adventure movies, but nobody really sees them that way—they are their own genre.
There are, however, a couple of films on the horizon that could help bring back old-school cinematic adventure. One is the long-planned—and finally actually shot—adaptation of the Uncharted video-game franchise, starring Tom Holland. The games borrow a lot from the Indiana Jones films, and it’ll be interesting to see how much that manifests in the adaptation.
Then there’s Letterboxd favorite David Lowery’s forever-upcoming medieval adventure drama The Green Knight, starring Dev Patel and Alicia Vikander (who herself recently rebooted another video-game icon, Lara Croft). Plus they are still threatening to make another Indiana Jones movie, even if it no longer looks like Steven Spielberg will direct it.
While these are all exciting projects—and notwithstanding the current crisis in the multiplexes—it can’t help but feel like we may never again get a movie quite like The Mummy, with its unlikely combination of eye-popping CGI, old-fashioned adventure tropes and a once-in-a-lifetime ensemble of overflowing hotness. Long may love for it reign on Letterboxd—let’s see if we can’t get that average rating up, the old fashioned way. For Anwen.
Related content
How I Letterboxd with The Mummy fan Eve (“The first film I went out and bought memorabilia for… it was a Mummy action figure that included canopic jars”)
The Mummy (Universal) Collection
Every film featuring the Mummy (not mummies in general)
Follow Dom on Letterboxd
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theoceanoasis · 4 years
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"General Skywalker, sir, what are you doing?"
"What does it look like Fives, I'm cleaning."
"I know that but why, normally we give these kinds of jobs to shinys.
"I know, but I wanted to do then."
"But sir, the shinys. There going to be so sad when they don't get to clean the floor.
Anakin smiled and rolled his eyes.
"I'm sure they will."
"sir, please stop there going to become insufferable if we don't have any chores to give them."
"Your an Ark trooper, be creative."
"Fives smirked at that before looking at him with concern again.
"Why are you cleaning?"
"It helps me clear my head and it relax's me.
"Okay sir, if you say so."
Fives turned around and left while Anakin continued cleaning.
An hour later and Kix was the next one to find him.
"SIR!!!"
Anakin looked up in surprise.
"Are you okay, Kix?"
"You almost gave me a heart attack. Why are you in the supply closet?"
"I'm cleaning it out."
"We have medics who can do that."
Anakin just shrugged his shoulders.
"It's fine, I can clean it."
Kix looked at him as though he has gone insane.
"How did you get in here with no one seeing you?"
Anakin just shrugged his shoulders.
"I just walked in and started cleaning the supply closet."
Kix was still looking at him like he was crazy.
"Sir, are you feeling okay.
"I'm fine, Kix."
"Are you sure because your cleaning."
"I always clean when I want to clear my head."
"Oh then how come I never see you clean."
"I have no idea. Some times I'm cleaning right in front of you and you have no idea I'm there."
"Huh weird. Well I'm going to leave now."
"It was even later that day when Jesse and Hardcase where both going to the gym and spotted there General on the floor.
They quickly rushed over alarmed. He had hurt himself only to stop in there tracks.
"Hey Jesse, Hey Hardcase. Don't mind me I am just cleaning."
Jesse was the first to break out of his surprise.
"I can see that but why."
"I like cleaning, it helps me clear my head."
Jesse just stared at him.
"Sir, no one likes cleaning."
"Hardcase shushed him and looked at the General smiling."
"If you like to clean can you help me clean my armor."
Anakin frowned for a moment thinking it over.
"Okay, Hardcase."
Jesse just looked at Hardcase confused.
When the General was turned away Hardcase quickly signed that he will tell him later.
"Well General I will see you later."
"Bye you two."
He went back to cleaning but realized Hardcase and Jesse did not spar.
"Hey didn't you two come here to spar."
"It's okay General I have to show something to Jesse anyway."
When the door closed Jesse turned to Hardcase.
"What was that all about?"
"Remember the battle and what happened to our armor."
Jesse cringed at that.
"Yes of course I remember."
Well why don't we have General Skywalker clean up the mess if he likes cleaning.
Jesse smiled catching on.
"Your a genius Hardcase."
"Thank you."
"When General Skywalker comes by later we can just say we have patrol and ditch him.
"Sounds great."
The two walked back to the barracks smiling at there new plan.
Later that day General Skywalker entered the barracks.
"Over here, General."
General Skywalker walked over and saw two sets of armor laid out. They were disgusting. Each one was so covered in mud and grime that you couldn't even see the color.
Anakin sighed.
"I don't want to know."
"Here you go General."
"Thank you."
General Skywalker sat down and got to work while Hardcase and Jesse tried to leave.
"Where are you two going. I thought you were helping."
"We have patrol."
General Skywalker frowned.
"Okay then."
Jesse and Hardcase walked away leaving there General to clean up there mess.
Anakin spent a long time scrubbing Hardcase's armor. Whatever was on it would not come out.
When Anakin was finally finished he got to work on Jesse's. He was halfway done when Rex and Kix walked into the barracks.
"General Skywalker, sir?"
"Hello Kix, Hello Anakin."
"Anakin what are you doing?"
"I'm cleaning Hardcase and Jesse's armor."
"Why?"
"They asked me too."
"That doesn't explain why there not here."
"They told me they had patrol."
"That's not true. I saw them thirty minutes ago."
Rex growled.
"They lied to you."
Kix gave him a weary look.
"General, have you been cleaning all day?"
Rex looked back and forth.
"All day?"
"Yes, I saw him cleaning in medbay earlier."
Rex frowned.
"Anakin I'd it your anxiety."
"Yes."
Rex sighs softly.
"Come here."
Anakin gets up and walks over.
Rex pulls him in for a hug and kisses him. When they pull back Anakin is bright red.
Rex loops his arm around Anakin's waist and pulls him against his chest where Anakin snuggle's into.
"Jesse and Hardcase are going to be punished for this."
Anakin just tucks his head further into Rex's chest.
"Let's go."
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