Grayox to Memes · 1 year agoHallmark channel go brrrrrimagemessage-square150fedilinkarrow-up11.39Karrow-down143
arrow-up11.35Karrow-down1imageHallmark channel go brrrrrGrayox to Memes · 1 year agomessage-square150fedilink
minus-squareWarmSoda@lemm.eelinkfedilinkarrow-up47·1 year agoThey have two movies that are the same exact movie but told through two different main characters point of view. Same scenes and everything. It’s actually an interesting idea on paper. And Hallmark is probably the perfect way to do something like that.
minus-squareflashgnash@lemm.eelinkfedilinkarrow-up21·1 year agoHallmark red and hallmark blue. There are certain characters you can only get through trading with someone who watched the other film
minus-squaregrue@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up19arrow-down1·1 year ago It’s actually an interesting idea on paper. I’m hearing an implied “but not on screen…”
minus-squarenilloc@discuss.tchncs.delinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up8·edit-21 year agoNone of them are interesting in practice, but the idea of two versions of a movie being filmed at once sounds like it could be cool. And if successful, would be almost twice as profitable as one.
minus-squarerotopenguin@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up10arrow-down1·1 year agoThe idea worked out pretty well in “To every you I’ve loved before” and “To me, the one who loved you”. I somehow doubt Hallmark did quite as good a job of it.
They have two movies that are the same exact movie but told through two different main characters point of view. Same scenes and everything.
It’s actually an interesting idea on paper. And Hallmark is probably the perfect way to do something like that.
Hallmark red and hallmark blue. There are certain characters you can only get through trading with someone who watched the other film
I’m hearing an implied “but not on screen…”
None of them are interesting in practice, but the idea of two versions of a movie being filmed at once sounds like it could be cool. And if successful, would be almost twice as profitable as one.
The idea worked out pretty well in “To every you I’ve loved before” and “To me, the one who loved you”.
I somehow doubt Hallmark did quite as good a job of it.