Talk:Fury/@comment-71.185.119.62-20120801174027/@comment-96.252.149.62-20120803065550

Coming from someone with an acting background, well musical theatre lol, I'm not going to claim I'm an amazing actor, but I do watch for things.

In terms of his mom not reacting right, I like that the actress chose not to over act it in a sense of breaking down. Too much emotion there could cause the character go into hysterics and since her dialogue is mainly for her son, it doesn't really contribute to the real storyline at play. It would do more harm than good in this setting.

If it wasn't a big ensemble cast in a show, but a movie, then the director would have purposely focused on that moment to give more drama and emotion. In the show, it would slow things down too much.

Also with the mom's reaction to the turn, she didn't just back up. Watch her eyes. I was actually impressed. In a matter of seconds, she portrayed 3-4 different emotions. Confusion, to fear, to horror/possibly disgust. Fast enough again to get the point across, but not slowling things down too much.

As for Scott's reaction to the dead officers. He's not a little kid and screaming and freaking out would be a horrible thing for a hero to do. So looking shocked works.

As for the Matt and him incident, it's too risky for him to attempt to fight Matt when he's the master of the Kanima a monster none of them have been able to defeat thus far. Scott's not a dumb character, ok he can be, but im glad he played it smart here. Jumping into action at the wrong time leads to the death of a loved one. It happens all the time in books, movies, and tv shows. This to me shows character growth.

Just my two cents. Lol nvr posted here but just recently found the site. Cheerio ppl.