General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Seven Proxies
The Critical Drinker
comments
Comments by "Seven Proxies" (@sevenproxies4255) on "The Fifth Element - Bonkers, Baffling and Brilliant" video.
I always interpreted Ruby Rhod as a kind of stinging social satire. How women will fawn over basically the strangest things so long as the thing has celebrity status.
264
@kathleenhensley5951 Ironically enough... Wasn't Shakespeare more of a "people's playwright" who tried a lot of comedy in his day, and even the dramas were intended to appeal to a wide audience? Shakespeare being considered "high culture" is more of a modern invention, by nerdy academics. Shakespearean dramas were pretty much "The Fifth Element" of their time. :P
6
@mariaregina4242 That's not a very "fun" fact to be honest. :S Also, it seems that nobody taught Luc not to crap where he eats.
3
Trust me. Girls can fit remarkably big objects inside of them. Look up the pornstar called "Siswet" on xvideos for more knowledge. But remember, what has been seen cannot be unseen. ;)
2
I don't think Zorg actually knew that he was working for the evil entity or that the evil entity existed at all. After all, all he knows of the evil entity is the pseudonym "Mr Shadow". And he's probably only dealt with him over the phone. To Zorg, "Mr Shadow" is a kind of Kayser Soze or Mr Gold. Zorg assumes he's a massively powerful business magnate of some kind, but one that pulls strings from the shadows, never revealing his true identity to the public. "Mr Shadow" has also probably made displays of his influence, and Zorg saw it and realized that it's more far reaching and wealthy than his own, which compels Zorg to seek to ingratiate himself with Shadow.
2
@godfreymitti9241 It may have been at some point. But you know, scripts change during development, especially when casting options don't plan out as intended. If Ruby Rhod is intended to be Prince... Then it's a pretty glaring parody more than anything.
1