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Rampage 2 Capital Punishment
Rampage 2 - Capital Punishment ein Film von Uwe Boll mit Brendan Fletcher, Lochlyn Munro. Inhaltsangabe: Es sind drei Jahre seit dem verheerenden. Rampage: Capital Punishment Rampage 2 picks up a year later and Bill Williamson re-surfaces to continue his reign of terror, now with a massive following of. Sadistic kevlar-donning small-town misanthrope Bill Williamson is back! His mission: to wreak vengeance on those in power and save America from itself, one.
Rampage 2 Capital Punishment Aktuell im Streaming:
Drei Jahre nach dem verheerenden Amoklauf in einer Kleinstadt sind die Behörden weiterhin auf der fieberhaften Suche nach dem Schützen Bill Williamson. Dieser verbreitet online über Clips und Videos sein radikales Weltbild und findet viele. Rampage 2 - Capital Punishment ein Film von Uwe Boll mit Brendan Fletcher, Lochlyn Munro. Inhaltsangabe: Es sind drei Jahre seit dem verheerenden. bellinisristorante.eu - Achetez Rampage 2: Capital Punishment à petit prix. Livraison gratuite (voir cond.). Retrouvez infos & avis sur une large sélection de DVD & Blu-ray. Rampage 2 - Capital Punishment () (Uncut). Allemand · Blu-ray. DVDépuisé Blu-ray(sélectionné). 2 Autres versions disponibles. Édition standard Français. Rampage: Capital Punishment Rampage 2 picks up a year later and Bill Williamson re-surfaces to continue his reign of terror, now with a massive following of. Rampage 2: Capital Punishment. 1 Std. 29 Min+. Violent anti-hero Bill Williamson has a plan to change the world by exacting vengeance on the rich. Komplette Handlung und Informationen zu Rampage 2 - Capital Punishment. Ein Mann dringt in einen Fernsehsender ein und übernimmt die Kontrolle.
Rampage: Capital Punishment Rampage 2 picks up a year later and Bill Williamson re-surfaces to continue his reign of terror, now with a massive following of. Rampage 2 - Capital Punishment () (Uncut). Allemand · Blu-ray. DVDépuisé Blu-ray(sélectionné). 2 Autres versions disponibles. Édition standard Français. Drei Jahre nach dem verheerenden Amoklauf in einer Kleinstadt sind die Behörden weiterhin auf der fieberhaften Suche nach dem Schützen Bill Williamson. Dieser verbreitet online über Clips und Videos sein radikales Weltbild und findet viele.
Rampage 2 Capital Punishment Navigation menu Video
Rampage 2 - Extrait - Interview
Oz Hölle Hinter Gittern Stream de Mr. Miyagi. Natürlich ist der erste Teil etwas besser,aber der teil ist auch wirklich cool gemacht und echt beeindruckend. Danilo Z. Filmtyp Spielfilm. Deine E-Mail-Adresse. Streets of London. Das sagen Oliver Kalkofe und Peter Rütten.
Whereas the first film, as fucked up as it may be, at least had a direction and a purpose of some kind, this film has nothing.
No discernible message or point to it. The main character just rants about everything for like an hour and then blows up a building.
It's fucking stupid. And it's not even directed at the American government, or politicians, as the film's title and description would have you believe.
At least that's a purpose. The character talks like a fucking madman what argument is being made here , and even shoots a hostage at one point because she practices yoga.
Everyone knows that Uwe Boll makes awful films, but this one takes the fucking cake. What a piece of shit. Stephen S Super Reviewer.
Nov 04, Rampage was one of the better-received films from director Uwe Boll, with several critics and members of the public declaring it his best work, something that could actually be qualified as "good.
I found Rampage to be a rather empty exercise in shock violence that grew tedious and misguided as it continued. A sequel to an intellectually empty and violent film minus meaningful subtext or commentary was not exactly what I would have requested.
Years after his murderous spree in a small town, Bill Brendan Fletcher is back with another "important" message to deliver to the masses.
He storms a TV news station, rounds u a number of hostages after murdered an equal number, and appoints egotistical anchor Chip Lochlyn Munro as his go-between with the police.
He insists his message must be heard. You can guess already whether it's worth the fuss. Rampage 2: Capital Punishment is an exercise in testing your patience with its aimless nihilism.
It's a formless diatribe against all the world's evils. Topics include the NSA and spying, the war in Iraq, Bush's status as a war criminal, oil companies, drone strikes, Edward Snowden, Obamacare, the media, reality TV, global warming, Wall Street, and just about every other political target you can think of from an angry reactionary with a healthy sense of outrage.
It's not that these topics are beyond scrutinizing or that Bill might have some legitimate points as he's skipping around from subject to subject, but he's too scatterbrained, inarticulate, and just a poor mouthpiece for the revolution he wants to inspire.
Bill is no different than your garden-variety college freshman that thinks they have suddenly come across amazing psychic insights into the rotten core of humanity after one political science class.
I do find Bill's moral championing of stricter gun control laws to be somewhat comically disingenuous. This is the problem with Bill as a character and his ongoing rampages.
He's all sputtering outrage without a filter and direction, without honing his fury. It's easy to tune this guy out because he sounds no more particularly articulate than any other person who legitimately uses the word "manifesto" in daily life.
Chances are if anyone in your life refers to something they wrote, un-ironically, as a "manifesto," get a new friend pronto. Here's an example of the overall aimlessness of Bill's indignation.
One of his hostages is quivering in yoga pants. He asks if she does yoga and she nods her head. He demands she perform some yoga poses at gunpoint.
It is gymnastics for the egocentric," he argues. Then he shoots her. He shoots this woman just because she does yoga. It's not like this character was going to have any semblance of a moral high ground considering he's coming off a spree killing with over victims in his wake, but it makes any political points he may attempt null and void.
Want one more example of just how incoherently rambling Bill's diatribes are? Amongst his targets is the film Lincoln and Steven Spielberg himself really!
He declares that, "You think the Civil War happened to free the slaves and billionaire Spielberg makes you dumber. The reality is every war is about money, and the stupid people must die because the elite decided it.
I got bored listening to him. Sadly, that's what a good majority of the film ends up being: listening to this guy endlessly complain.
It's like the guy who yells on the street corner just got a bigger stage but his act is the same. One of my major criticisms with Boll's first Rampage was that it was too limited and without providing any relevant commentary to go with its violence.
The sequel doesn't make much progress. Every victim that Ben shoots has to be given a tighter slow-mo shot so we can better soak up the squib hit of his or her chest exploding with blood.
At least Ben's violence is channeled to a single source rather than unleashing it against the denizens of an entire town, but his message is a messy shotgun blast of social ills.
It's angry and nihilistic but without anything to add. If there is a cogent message it flies completely under the radar and gets lost in all the rambling rhetoric and macho posturing.
Let's talk about the bait and switch nature of the movie's title as well as the DVD cover advertising. When you see a masked gunman standing next to a burning Capital building and the title proclaims "Capital Punishment," I think 99 out of people would correctly assume the majority of the action takes place in D.
Oh how wrong those 99 people would be the th was just dumb luck, so don't get too smug. The entire plot revolves around Bill holding a TV station hostage.
That's it. No government building, no government officials, nothing even remotely related to Washington D.
It seems like the next step on Boll's populist journey. Instead, most of the film is a series of ugly vignettes of Bill terrorizing the frightened station employees by gunpoint, demanding his interview and an airing of his nihilistic rhetoric.
Even at a little over 85 minutes, the film feels laboriously padded out and stretched thin. The movie literally spends almost eight minutes on this subject, like it's a great uptick in suspense.
Lo and behold, he does have an additional DVD copy. Wasn't that worth spending valuable time on? Fletcher Freddy vs. Jason returns to the completely underwritten role of Bill, more uncontrollable mouthpiece than anything resembling a person.
He's effectively peeved but he still doesn't come across as that threatening a screen presence, which is saying something considered he's carrying high-powered assault weapons.
Munro Scary Movie feels like he just got the call minutes before filming. He seems like he's constantly judging what he should be doing in every scene; perhaps that's a beneficial sign of his performance since his man is playing it on the fly in a hostage situation.
His long speech to the camera as a news anchor is tiresome, circuitous philosophical vomit, which also summarizes most of the dialogue.
The one amusing aspect from casting is that Boll himself plays Chip's advantageous and morally unscrupulous news director.
He's thrilled with the ratings and attention the station is getting. You decide if this is some sort of meta commentary on Boll and his penchant for rolling with the punches.
I fear Boll thinks that there is a level of audience attachment to his spree killer that simply doesn't exist. He's not an anti-hero, he's not a revolutionary, he's not even an engaging character by any generous metric and that's because he's just a stand-in for tedious ideology.
He's a mouth and a trigger finger, and that's all Bill is, in no compelling manner. I worry that Boll will continue to insert Bill into new settings, have him round up some innocent people, and then we'll watch him sputter for an hour about whatever cultural and political misdeeds are currently bugging Boll.
I worry that the promise of "Capital Punishment" inherent in the title will really just lead to a third Rampage film with this promise actually, finally, followed through.
Generally, I just worry that the world will have to suffer more abuse from further appearances by Bill, the world's most irritating psychopath who loves to hear himself talk.
The scariest part is that some people will actually think this is good. You might want to reconsider your friendship with these people too, especially if they also use the word "manifesto.
Nate Z Super Reviewer. Aug 20, Follow-up to Uwe Boll's finest effort, Rampage, Rampage: Capital Punishment is a surprisingly disturbing decent into madness.
Well crafted in order to make the viewer unsettled with every frame. Uwe Boll has had the reputation of being one of the worst directors working today due his numerous video game adaptations.
However, whenever he writes his own ideas to make a film, he manages to make something watchable, and this film is quite good for a sequel, and even more impressive for the fact that it's a Boll film.
I never hated Boll to be honest, I always viewed his work as so-so, and he is able to make entertaining films when he's got a great idea to work with.
Rampage: Capital Punishment is a haunting psychological decent into madness, one that mixes action, thriller and horror elements into one effective, unforgettable picture, one that is sure to be a cult film among midnight movie fans.
Boll manages to pull off something thoroughly engaging, a film that has some tense, thrilling, horrifying moments that just grabs your attention, and you simply cannot tear yourself away from what you watch.
The film is not perfect of course, but considering that this was made by Uwe Boll, it's a good effort, and it just goes to show that he can make a competent film.
The lead actor Brendan Fletcher gives a great performance as the film's villain, and with that being said, I think he deserves to get far bigger roles in bid budget films, as he is a capable actor who manages to make a role his own.
Rampage: Capital Punishment won't get an y accolades anytime soon, as it is a film that unfortunately never realizes its full on potential due to budget constraints and a few weak areas, but for what it is, it's a good effort worthy seeing if you want one of the better movies from Uwe Boll.
Alex r Super Reviewer. See all Audience reviews. There are no approved quotes yet for this movie. Best Horror Movies.
Worst Superhero Movies. Best Netflix Series and Shows. Go back. More trailers. Chip agrees and leaves the basement, where he relays his instructions to the responding police officers.
However, while trying to air the disc, he accidentally slips and breaks it. He returns to the basement and tells Bill what had happened, and an agitated Bill gives him a duplicate of the disc.
While Chip is gone, Bill criticizes one of the hostages for her personal life before killing her. He is then confronted by another hostage, who reveals herself to be the sister of one of the people he killed at Tenderville.
When she expresses her intent to kill him, Bill forces a reluctant male hostage to beat her. Eventually, the contents of the disc are aired on live television; in it, Bill rants in a video recording about how the current system is flawed and that the U.
The video ends with Bill appealing to the American people to retaliate violently against politicians and the wealthy in order to restore society.
Meanwhile, the officers manage to contact Bill's father with the intention of using him to appeal to Bill. Chip returns to the basement with a camera crew, including an undercover police officer, and gives Bill a cellphone with his father on the other end.
Williamson tries to appeal to Bill, then reveals his mother died after a car accident, as a result of medication she had been taking for depression following Bill's first killing spree and disappearance.
At that moment, Bill becomes suspicious of the undercover officer and kills him, then abruptly ends the conversation with his father.
Using hidden security cameras he implanted earlier, he notices SWAT teams converging on the basement and remotely detonates explosives, killing or incapacitating the officers.
At Chip's urging, Bill commences with the live interview, during which he becomes more specific about his rants in the disc and also espouses his opinions about killing innocent people.
Asked if he regrets not being there when his mother died, he gets visibly upset but replies that his aim is bigger than family, and that it is about the survival of humanity.
He then reveals his intention to die along with Chip before shooting him in the arm and releasing the other hostages.
Bill immediately engages a SWAT team in a shootout before fleeing into the building's ventilation system, leaving behind a gas bomb.
Just as the SWAT team discovers the bomb, it detonates, destroying the entire station and killing everyone inside, including Chip and the officers.
Bill is then shown to be alive and well, watching a report of the station's destruction on his phone. As he does this, he spots a young girl reading a book and criticizes her for reading one telling her she's been brainwashed with lies by the system.
Bill then gives her a Beretta 92 pistol and instructs her to use it to kill her parents and then herself before sending her off with a look of satisfaction on his face.
Funds for a third film, entitled Rampage 3: No Mercy , were being raised by Boll through the crowdfunding website Indiegogo. According to him, the second film didn't garner enough interest to warrant another sequel being funded and he needed the help from crowd funding to complete the trilogy.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This article is missing information about the film's release, and reception. Please expand the article to include this information.
Further details may exist on the talk page. April
Rampage 2 Capital Punishment Movies / TV Video
Rampage: Capital Punishment Trailer (2014)View All Photos Movie Info. Bill Williamson hatches a plan to exact revenge on the rich while ripping Washington apart. Uwe Boll. Uwe Boll , Brendan Fletcher.
Nov 30, Brendan Fletcher Bill Williamson. Lochlyn Munro Chip Parker. Mike Dopud Marc. Michaela Mann Marlene. Bruce Blain The Homeless guy.
John Sampson John. Uwe Boll Andy the Producer. Uwe Boll Director. Uwe Boll Screenwriter. Brendan Fletcher Screenwriter.
May 6, Rating: 2. View All Critic Reviews 1. Feb 03, Absolutely dreadful. Whereas the first film, as fucked up as it may be, at least had a direction and a purpose of some kind, this film has nothing.
No discernible message or point to it. The main character just rants about everything for like an hour and then blows up a building.
It's fucking stupid. And it's not even directed at the American government, or politicians, as the film's title and description would have you believe.
At least that's a purpose. The character talks like a fucking madman what argument is being made here , and even shoots a hostage at one point because she practices yoga.
Everyone knows that Uwe Boll makes awful films, but this one takes the fucking cake. What a piece of shit. Stephen S Super Reviewer. Nov 04, Rampage was one of the better-received films from director Uwe Boll, with several critics and members of the public declaring it his best work, something that could actually be qualified as "good.
I found Rampage to be a rather empty exercise in shock violence that grew tedious and misguided as it continued. A sequel to an intellectually empty and violent film minus meaningful subtext or commentary was not exactly what I would have requested.
Years after his murderous spree in a small town, Bill Brendan Fletcher is back with another "important" message to deliver to the masses.
He storms a TV news station, rounds u a number of hostages after murdered an equal number, and appoints egotistical anchor Chip Lochlyn Munro as his go-between with the police.
He insists his message must be heard. You can guess already whether it's worth the fuss. Rampage 2: Capital Punishment is an exercise in testing your patience with its aimless nihilism.
It's a formless diatribe against all the world's evils. Topics include the NSA and spying, the war in Iraq, Bush's status as a war criminal, oil companies, drone strikes, Edward Snowden, Obamacare, the media, reality TV, global warming, Wall Street, and just about every other political target you can think of from an angry reactionary with a healthy sense of outrage.
It's not that these topics are beyond scrutinizing or that Bill might have some legitimate points as he's skipping around from subject to subject, but he's too scatterbrained, inarticulate, and just a poor mouthpiece for the revolution he wants to inspire.
Bill is no different than your garden-variety college freshman that thinks they have suddenly come across amazing psychic insights into the rotten core of humanity after one political science class.
I do find Bill's moral championing of stricter gun control laws to be somewhat comically disingenuous. This is the problem with Bill as a character and his ongoing rampages.
He's all sputtering outrage without a filter and direction, without honing his fury. It's easy to tune this guy out because he sounds no more particularly articulate than any other person who legitimately uses the word "manifesto" in daily life.
Chances are if anyone in your life refers to something they wrote, un-ironically, as a "manifesto," get a new friend pronto.
Here's an example of the overall aimlessness of Bill's indignation. One of his hostages is quivering in yoga pants. He asks if she does yoga and she nods her head.
He demands she perform some yoga poses at gunpoint. It is gymnastics for the egocentric," he argues. Then he shoots her.
He shoots this woman just because she does yoga. It's not like this character was going to have any semblance of a moral high ground considering he's coming off a spree killing with over victims in his wake, but it makes any political points he may attempt null and void.
Want one more example of just how incoherently rambling Bill's diatribes are? Amongst his targets is the film Lincoln and Steven Spielberg himself really!
He declares that, "You think the Civil War happened to free the slaves and billionaire Spielberg makes you dumber. The reality is every war is about money, and the stupid people must die because the elite decided it.
I got bored listening to him. Sadly, that's what a good majority of the film ends up being: listening to this guy endlessly complain.
It's like the guy who yells on the street corner just got a bigger stage but his act is the same. One of my major criticisms with Boll's first Rampage was that it was too limited and without providing any relevant commentary to go with its violence.
The sequel doesn't make much progress. Every victim that Ben shoots has to be given a tighter slow-mo shot so we can better soak up the squib hit of his or her chest exploding with blood.
At least Ben's violence is channeled to a single source rather than unleashing it against the denizens of an entire town, but his message is a messy shotgun blast of social ills.
It's angry and nihilistic but without anything to add. If there is a cogent message it flies completely under the radar and gets lost in all the rambling rhetoric and macho posturing.
Let's talk about the bait and switch nature of the movie's title as well as the DVD cover advertising. When you see a masked gunman standing next to a burning Capital building and the title proclaims "Capital Punishment," I think 99 out of people would correctly assume the majority of the action takes place in D.
Oh how wrong those 99 people would be the th was just dumb luck, so don't get too smug. The entire plot revolves around Bill holding a TV station hostage.
That's it. No government building, no government officials, nothing even remotely related to Washington D.
It seems like the next step on Boll's populist journey. Instead, most of the film is a series of ugly vignettes of Bill terrorizing the frightened station employees by gunpoint, demanding his interview and an airing of his nihilistic rhetoric.
Even at a little over 85 minutes, the film feels laboriously padded out and stretched thin. The movie literally spends almost eight minutes on this subject, like it's a great uptick in suspense.
Lo and behold, he does have an additional DVD copy. Wasn't that worth spending valuable time on? Fletcher Freddy vs. Jason returns to the completely underwritten role of Bill, more uncontrollable mouthpiece than anything resembling a person.
He's effectively peeved but he still doesn't come across as that threatening a screen presence, which is saying something considered he's carrying high-powered assault weapons.
Munro Scary Movie feels like he just got the call minutes before filming. He seems like he's constantly judging what he should be doing in every scene; perhaps that's a beneficial sign of his performance since his man is playing it on the fly in a hostage situation.
His long speech to the camera as a news anchor is tiresome, circuitous philosophical vomit, which also summarizes most of the dialogue.
The one amusing aspect from casting is that Boll himself plays Chip's advantageous and morally unscrupulous news director. He's thrilled with the ratings and attention the station is getting.
You decide if this is some sort of meta commentary on Boll and his penchant for rolling with the punches.
I fear Boll thinks that there is a level of audience attachment to his spree killer that simply doesn't exist.
He's not an anti-hero, he's not a revolutionary, he's not even an engaging character by any generous metric and that's because he's just a stand-in for tedious ideology.
He's a mouth and a trigger finger, and that's all Bill is, in no compelling manner. I worry that Boll will continue to insert Bill into new settings, have him round up some innocent people, and then we'll watch him sputter for an hour about whatever cultural and political misdeeds are currently bugging Boll.
I worry that the promise of "Capital Punishment" inherent in the title will really just lead to a third Rampage film with this promise actually, finally, followed through.
Generally, I just worry that the world will have to suffer more abuse from further appearances by Bill, the world's most irritating psychopath who loves to hear himself talk.
The scariest part is that some people will actually think this is good. You might want to reconsider your friendship with these people too, especially if they also use the word "manifesto.
Immediately after committing his rampage in Tenderville, Oregon , Bill Williamson disappeared and had been living off the grid for years with the money he stole from a bank during the massacre.
The video recording of his rants about violent population control had since garnered millions of views and turns Bill into an Internet sensation.
In the present day, Bill uses the stolen money to finance yet another killing spree, purchasing a number of weapons, including two fully automatic, military-grade Mk 18 Mod 0 carbines , and constructing homemade explosives.
After making final preparations for the killing spree, Bill shaves his head clean, dons his suit of body armor, and sets the interior of his house on fire.
He drives to an alleyway and uses its cover to shoot several random pedestrians undetected, before trying to enter a bingo hall, only to leave after finding it is closed.
Bill then travels to a television station in Washington, D. Inside, he shoots the security guard and several employees with the carbines. He then holds the survivors, including news anchorman Chip Parker, hostage and forces them to a basement at gunpoint.
He kills one of the hostages when he disregards one of his orders. Bill later gives Chip a disc and instructs him to go upstairs and air the contents of the disc nationwide, then return with a camera crew so they could do a live interview with him.
Chip agrees and leaves the basement, where he relays his instructions to the responding police officers. However, while trying to air the disc, he accidentally slips and breaks it.
He returns to the basement and tells Bill what had happened, and an agitated Bill gives him a duplicate of the disc. While Chip is gone, Bill criticizes one of the hostages for her personal life before killing her.
He is then confronted by another hostage, who reveals herself to be the sister of one of the people he killed at Tenderville.
When she expresses her intent to kill him, Bill forces a reluctant male hostage to beat her. Eventually, the contents of the disc are aired on live television; in it, Bill rants in a video recording about how the current system is flawed and that the U.
The video ends with Bill appealing to the American people to retaliate violently against politicians and the wealthy in order to restore society.
Meanwhile, the officers manage to contact Bill's father with the intention of using him to appeal to Bill. Chip returns to the basement with a camera crew, including an undercover police officer, and gives Bill a cellphone with his father on the other end.
Williamson tries to appeal to Bill, then reveals his mother died after a car accident, as a result of medication she had been taking for depression following Bill's first killing spree and disappearance.
At that moment, Bill becomes suspicious of the undercover officer and kills him, then abruptly ends the conversation with his father.
Using hidden security cameras he implanted earlier, he notices SWAT teams converging on the basement and remotely detonates explosives, killing or incapacitating the officers.
At Chip's urging, Bill commences with the live interview, during which he becomes more specific about his rants in the disc and also espouses his opinions about killing innocent people.
Asked if he regrets not being there when his mother died, he gets visibly upset but replies that his aim is bigger than family, and that it is about the survival of humanity.
He then reveals his intention to die along with Chip before shooting him in the arm and releasing the other hostages.
Bill immediately engages a SWAT team in a shootout before fleeing into the building's ventilation system, leaving behind a gas bomb. Just as the SWAT team discovers the bomb, it detonates, destroying the entire station and killing everyone inside, including Chip and the officers.
Rampage 2 Capital Punishment Movies Preview Video
US shooting rampage Weitere Film-News. Merci beaucoup! Bewerte : Verbrecher. Brendan Fletcher. Drei Jahre nach dem verheerenden Amoklauf in einer Kleinstadt sind die Terminator Filmreihe weiterhin auf der fieberhaften Suche nach dem Schützen Bill Williamson. Run All Night. Hellboy Ganzer Film Deutsch easy to tune this guy out because he sounds no more particularly articulate than any other person who legitimately uses the word "manifesto" in daily life. The Queen's Gambit. The Good Lord Bird. Best Horror Movies. Nate Z Super Reviewer. Saturday Night Live: Season Retrieved 8 June Sadistic kevlar-donning small-town misanthrope Bill Williamson is back! His mission: to wreak vengeance on those in power and save America from itself, one. Drei Jahre nach dem verheerenden Amoklauf in einer Kleinstadt sind die Behörden weiterhin auf der fieberhaften Suche nach dem Schützen Bill Williamson. Alle Infos zum Film 'Rampage 2' (Deutschland und Kanada), ein Film von Uwe Boll aus dem Jahre In den Hauptrollen des Films sind Brendan. Schlecht ist Little-Nicky. Drei Jahre nach dem verheerenden Amoklauf in einer Kleinstadt sind die Behörden weiterhin auf der fieberhaften Suche nach dem Schützen Bill Williamson. Schwerter des Königs - Dungeon Siege. John Wick. Rampage 3 - President Down. Möchte ich sehen. Rampage 2 Half Bike Capital Punishment. Eins ist allerdings glasklar: Für seine Ansichten ist Bill sowohl bereit zu töten — als auch Legion Season 1 sterben Whatsbox. John Sampson John. Forgot your password? Here's an example of the overall aimlessness of Bill's indignation. Every victim that Ben shoots has to be given Melanie Coste tighter slow-mo shot so we can better soak up the squib hit of his or her chest exploding with blood. The Conners. Sadly, that's what a good majority of the film ends up being: listening to this guy endlessly complain.




3 Kommentare
Zulugul
Ja ist es die Phantastik
Goltisar
Welche prächtige Wörter
Sakora
Ich bin endlich, ich tue Abbitte, aber es kommt mir nicht ganz heran. Kann, es gibt noch die Varianten?