• @[email protected]
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    143 months ago

    I remember going from “I totally get this guy” for the first half to “oh…crap, this guy is actually a nutcase shithead” by the end.

    • @FelixCress
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      63 months ago

      He was actually much more sane than multiple characters he met on his way.

    • @USNWoodwork
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      43 months ago

      That movies was so good. I was a teenager with testosterone levels pushing towards psychopathy. I thought he was the hero of the story even after it was over. My mom (I guess correctly) thought he was the bad guy.

      My cousins and I still quote that movie a lot, though its even less PC now than it was back then. “Now THESE are Vietnam Jungle Boots! They’re great for…” Back in the day we would scream that shit at each other, now I’d cringe so hard I’d probably pull a stomach muscle.

    • @[email protected]
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      33 months ago

      I thought it was a shame they made the ending that way. The criticism against dishonesty and greed are spot on, even more so today.

  • @BigPotato
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    83 months ago

    This was a movie that I’d seen one day and promptly forgot the name of it. I tried in vain to find out years later. I asked my mom and she had no idea what I was talking about. I asked everyone and no one even knew. I was convinced it was a fever dream or something.

    Until I heard Tech N9ne’s Everybody Move and he said “Falling Down like Michael Douglas” and it was a core memory unlocked and I finally got to watch it again.

    It was every bit as good as I remember.

    • @bandwidthcrisis
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      23 months ago

      Just think of it as the middle movie of the strange trilogy that includes “London Bridge” and “My Fair Lady”.

  • @[email protected]
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    73 months ago

    Have you ever heard the expression “The customer is always right”?…Yeah, well, here I am, the customer.