Andy Weir says spoiling Project Hail Mary's big surprise in trailers was highly debated
Andy Weir says spoiling Project Hail Mary's big surprise in trailers was highly debated
There’s a reason I put on my headphones and listen to music during the trailers in the cinema
I hate trailers with a passion
Weir says. “We want people to go now I want to know what’s going on.”
Well, you spoiled it already, so I already know and I kinda lost interest in the movie…
Shakespeare tells you in the first five minutes that ‘Romeo And Juliet’ is a tragedy.
‘Titanic’ had almost a century of spoilers published before it opened.
Did you really think that Luthor had a chance going into “Superman???”
Wow, yes, great argument.
Some popular media is widely spoiled therefore no spoiler ever matters in any other media.
Shush with your logic and common sense!
Many/most? People have never heard of this movie before a few weeks ago. And I didn’t know there was a book until I just opened this thread…
But hey lets computer it to probably the 3 most un- spoilable movies in the last century /s
Don’t let it. It’s a phenomenal book, and the other adaptation of Weir’s work, The Martian, was very well-done. I suspect Project Hail Mary will be an excellent movie. Just don’t watch the trailer.
(But honestly even if you do, it’s a spoiler for the first, like, quarter of the story. If that. It’s not some massive twist or anything, it was just a really awesome reveal in the book.)
It was a joy to read!
It was also the perfect book to read after finishing Cixin Liu’s Remembrance of Earth’s Past trilogy.
I bought and read the books because I watched season one on Netflix, and simply couldn’t tolerate not knowing what that joke meant, and why the Trisolarans wanted to kill the one Wallfacer so badly. I mowed through the books in about a week, and enjoyed all three books.
There are profound events, and the scope of the story becomes absolutely grand over the next two books, with some scenes and events that are now seared into memory.
But I was one hundred percent enthused and sold on the books before they arrived, based on the ideas that captivated me in the Netflix show.
The escalation and stakes go up considerably, but if you weren’t feeling the first book, I’m not sure if you’d enjoy the other two.
They did what?
I would literally pay 100e to read the book again for the first time and those fuckers spoiled the film?
Good lord.