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Lore Dosher

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Aug 2, 2024, 11:01:43 AM8/2/24
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I'd argue that is one of their calling cards, and one of the strong points of the series. The shows are heavy in terms of topics, and the overall theme of the show (technology isn't necessarily making things better) is emphasized in nearly every ending of the show.

Although I don't believe these are all the possible endings, as I have come across other people who claim to get even more mash-ups than this and because sometimes it makes you go back and then gives you new options, the following video does discuss many scenarios, citing that there really aren't any happy endings.

However, my experience, which I wrote all my choices down and plan to go back through just to reconfirm, allowed for Stefan to time travel back as a boy and take the train with his mother, but instead of cutting to black and implying that Stefan died with mother on the train as others have expressed in their versions, mine cuts back to a therapy session, in which Stefan was found dead!

It appears my ending could be interpreted as bittersweet if we believe that Stefan died in one time line ultimately to live the way he wanted in another, but it also could be interpreted that Stefan dreamed this, while dying. This ending reminds me though of two other time travel films such as Donnie Darko or The Jacket in which main characters do sacrifice themselves for a different alternate reality.

The happiest ending is when Stefan reaches the maximum score for Bandersnatch. I mean, that was what he always wanted, not just the maximum score, but to put the same idea of the Bandersnatch book in his game.

Only after he killed his father he can work with calm, bring the game on time... etc. And the principal idea of the movie is revelated to us again when his therapist congratulates Stefan for finishing the game and asks him about the finale. "What the gamer doesn't know is I always control his destiny... yes, it has a happy ending" more or less said Stefan.

That's the way it is in the game, which Stefan creates; in the novel, where Pax is controling the destiny of the characters; and in the movie, which is made by Netflix. In the end, who decides how it ends is them, not us.

Sometimes you just want to put on a sad movie and cry out all your feelings. But do you know what's even better than watching a good tearjerker? A movie that starts out sad but then winds up in a happier place. It's a specific art form, so you might be struggling to come up with a movie that fits this description off the top of your head. The good news is that you don't have to, because there are plenty of sad movies with happy endings on Netflix.

There are two things that make these kinds of movies so great: contrast and timing. Just as you appreciate the sun more after a rainy day, you're better able to appreciate a happy scene in a movie when you and the characters have already been through some tough times. Also, in order to leave the movie feeling content, it's important that the final scene not be a downer ending. The structure of a sad-happy movie should be comparable to a well-designed rollercoaster; there are ups and downs, but you don't end the ride in a rut. Instead, you glide safely back into the platform area, knowing that no matter what has happened, everything is going to be okay. So here are some emotional rollercoaster rides you can check out on Netflix today. No spoilers, promise.

If you're not familiar with Jonathan Larson's musical, I won't ruin it for you. But let's just say that if this was an actual rollercoaster, there were definitely be a height requirement to ride the intense ups and down.

These movies will make you laugh, cry, and, everything in between. But because everything is tied up with a happy ending, you're certain to have a smile on your face by the time that the credits start rolling.

If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book. In this book, there is not only no happy ending, but no happy beginning and very few happy things in the middle.

We all go to the movies to escape. Whether your life is mundane and boring or plenty exciting, there's a very high possibility that you head over to the movies to turn off your brain and escape your obligations, even if it's just for a matter of minutes. "Praise be," the medium that has forever represented to modern civilization the power to disconnect.

Yes, fiction is much more common in movies because it sells more. In their eagerness to escape, audiences want to live what their favorite characters live, and it's very frequent that those favorite characters aren't exactly real. They're not even possible. However, films based on reality and true events also have the power to draw you in and engage you in a powerful yet more grounded experience. Undoubtedly, it also takes a good filmmaker to accomplish this. Unfortunately, not all of them have the capacity to turn true facts into something viewers want to experience.

But if we dig deeper into the microcosmos of the films based on true events, we will find something quite special. Films that are based on true stories that have happy endings. Whether it's a stroke of luck or a very fulfilling true story, sometimes it just happens, and we felt the need to celebrate. The following is a list of films based on true stories, with happy endings.

Steven Spielberg's Catch Me If You Can is a modern biopic that tells the story of Frank Abagnale Jr., a boy who observes his father's capacity to convince everyone of anything and simply raises the stakes. In his teenage years, Abagnale turned into a Pan Am pilot, an attorney, a doctor, etc. You name it, and he did it all. All by tricking basically everybody but his father. The film also tells the story of Carl Hanratty, the FBI agent who finally caught him and delivered the boy to the justice system.

After serving some time in prison, Frank is occasionally visited by Carl, who one day shows him a fraud check. In a matter of seconds, Frank solves the case, so immediately Carl negotiates his freedom if he starts working for the Financial Crimes Unit. Of course, Frank accepts, but he gets bored. A last opportunity to pass as a pilot is botched by Carl, who ends up catching Frank at the airport. Their last conversation flows into a last tagline where the film reveals Frank Abagnale Jr. is happily married with kids, is still friends with Frank, and has become an expert on bank fraud. This is one of the best crime dramas ever made.

In Ben Affleck's Argo, a United States Embassy in Iran is taken hostage by extremists. But six of the embassy staff escape and seek refuge in another embassy. The solution thought up by the CIA is... cinematic. Literally. They decide to create a cover story involving a movie production so that the six escapees can pose as Canadian filmmakers and, somehow, get extracted. As absurd as it sounds, the story is true, and it was good enough for Hollywood to give producers the top prize on Oscar night in 2013.

CIA agent Tony Mendez arrives in Iran, posing as a movie producer. He meets with the staff and provides them with new identities. What follows is the film's spectacular display of tension as the embassy workers must pass through airport security, achieve freedom, and ultimately represent the beginning of the end of the hostage operation in the embassy. Considering how delicate the operation was, and how long it had to stay secret to avoid retaliation towards those still held captive, the film reveals all recognition to those involved was kept ultrasecret and away from the public eye. Do you want to see a good movie about politics? This is it.

A great civil rights film, Hidden Figures tells the story of Katherine Goble Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary Jackson, the three female African-American "computers" whose math skills were essential for the country to succeed in the Space Race of the '60s. Struggling against segregation and being looked down upon because they were women, the trio stomps on every barrier in the system.

The film's third act consists of Katherine leading the way in being recognized as a key player in the Mercury-Atlas mission that put John Glenn out there, after which he landed safely. The use of human computers was inevitable considering technological advancements, but the film reveals Mary became the first female African-American engineer working for NASA, joining Dorothy as part of the crew, and Katherine was crucial for the success of the Apollo missions.

J. A. Bayona's Spanish production of The Impossible tells the story of a family who are spending their Christmas holiday in Thailand. Wife and mother Maria, her husband Henry, and their three sons Lucas, Simon, and Thomas are unaware that an earthquake in Indonesia will cause a major tsunami known as the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. After the first tidal wave hits the resort, they become separated and try their very best to survive the disaster.

The film is a great and realistic adaptation of the ordeal, told from the perspective of a very united family. However, the third act finds Simon and Thomas on their own, Henry on the desperate lookout to find them, and Maria seriously injured in the hospital, where Lucas (Tom Holland in a very good performance) tries his best to offer help to other survivors. In a very emotional sequence, the whole family reunites in the hospital, and the film contemplates the miraculous aspect of their survival.

In The Zookeeper's Wife, Jan Żabiński, the director of the Warsaw Zoo, and his wife Antonina are trying to take care of the animals when Poland gets invaded by the Nazis in 1939. She and her son have been badly hurt in the attack, and Hitler's chief zoologist decides to take over the zoo. But Jan and Antonina make a counteroffer and turn the zoo into a farm that will provide food for the invaders. What they don't know is that Jan and Antonina are also using the zoo as a cover-up for housing Jewish refugees running from the Holocaust.

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