Into-It_Over-It

Into-It_Over-It t1_j2defa8 wrote

There was definitely a bit of a pride factor there. They had gone through this whole brilliant charade to gain Brunhilde's legal freedom, but it was turned sideways right in its final moments. Not to mention, it wasn't even Calvin Candie who had uncovered the plot; it was Stephen, who only really figured it out through a hunch and later interrogation. Calvin, however, had such an aggressive superiority complex that he took full credit for uncovering the plot, and attributed it to being smarter than Schultz. The combination of Calvin Candie being such a disgusting person, the uncovering of the plot, and the heat of the moment is what caused Schultz to be unable to stop himself from killing him.

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Into-It_Over-It t1_j0vtcos wrote

This probably could have been its own TV show, and it may have even been quite good, but instead they slapped the name "Grease" on it so it would sell. The irony of it all is that the constraints of putting this into an already established franchise are probably going to make it a worse show that, by the looks of this comment section, could potentially garner more criticism than viewership. I truly do not understand why networks and studios believe that new IP is somehow not marketable, when by all accounts consumers are ready for something new.

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Into-It_Over-It t1_iv8ql8c wrote

Gonna go out on a limb and say that one or two cracked teeth is far more terrifying than all of them. When it's one or two teeth that are cracked, it's grounded and relateable: people have a better grasp of what kind of pain that would be like. When every single tooth is cracked, it's less scary because it doesn't seem like something that could actually happen.

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