Was the flag that funny?
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moviemarathoneverynight — 12 years ago(June 25, 2013 10:09 AM)
it was so annoying that he had to mock landon..anyway, for me the flag was funny because it was so small and cute
haha that's the reason I laughed.. the other two were talking about something important while he was planting that flag in a very careful way..it was touching and funny at the same time.. ^_^ -
wears-alan — 12 years ago(June 25, 2013 10:44 AM)
I always thought Taylor was thinking "Here we are on an unknown planet some 2000 years from home with no chance of getting back and this fvcking idiot is planting a flag"!!!!
You are entitled to my opinion, whether you want it or not!! -
saturnchick — 12 years ago(July 19, 2013 09:38 PM)
Yes, quite a maniacal laugh that felt totally overdone and out of place. I was sorry that they hadn't the forethought to give Heston a Professor Hinkle-esque mustache so he could twirl it.
Lie still. I've never done this before; and there will
be blood. -
Kawada_Kira — 11 years ago(June 05, 2014 11:58 PM)
Because it was so stupid in so many ways, which have been elucidated on this thread. Here they were on another planet hundreds of light years away (or so they thought), 2,000 years after they had set off, and this guy was planting the flag of a country that was extremely unlikely to still exist, and even if it did still exist nobody would give a damn because (again, as far as they knew at the time) it was a small portion of some speck of a planet far off in the universe. Like, imagine if at this very moment, right now as you're reading this, three dudes are appearing on some faraway planet and one of them is planting a flag of the Roman Republic. Think about the absurdity of that for a second.
And in any case, regardless of whether the US would still exist or not, they were just three guys on some unknown planet so how absurd is it to still care about countries anyway? Showing up on another planet is a great opportunity to see how stupid patriotism is and scrap the whole concept of countries, an artificial division between human beings. What would be the point of perpetuating that concept on another planet?
I thought the laugh was hilarious and really perfectly expressed just how absurd planting that flag was, as was the sentiment behind it. I'd have laughed too, and exactly the way he did.
"The people, and the people alone, are the motive force in the making of world history."
Mao -
xcom-22-211813 — 11 years ago(June 07, 2014 09:29 AM)
Because when little Tommy looks up in to the sky at night, he knows that somewhere, light-years from home, stands an American, with the courage and determination to raise the stars and stripes and bring freedom across the galaxy.
God Bless the United States of America
(f/22-A's fly overhead while national anthem plays) -
Mississippi20 — 11 years ago(August 31, 2014 11:55 PM)
Taylor had just told Landon that he has to let go of everything he knew - it's all gone. They (think) they're on a different planet lightyears away from Earth and it's 2,000 years later..obviously Taylor is laughing at Landon still holding on to a past identity.
Pretty obvious from watching the film that the laugh was dubbed in post-production. Might not have even been Heston's laugh. It was likely dubbed for greater effect. And with the way the camera zooms, it's almost like something from a horror film. I don't necessarily think it was added for comedic affect. It just makes a profound, perhaps even unsettling, statement