u/Optimal_Tennis8673
Movie about a crew of scientists exploring an underground cave, but they're actually inside of a giant monster?
There was a crew of scientists on a mission to explore a gloomy cave system. The twist was that as they went deeper they eventually realized that it wasn't a cave, but they were inside some giant eldritch monster. The cave walls were its internal tubes and organs. Then they realized that the monster knew they were in there, and was going to close its mouth or use its immune system to trap them.
I may have seen this in a dream so I don't know if it's an actual film/based on something real, or my mind made the whole thing up.
Here are some movies that it's NOT:
- The Descent
- Underwater with Twilight
- Some movie from the 90s that has Alan Grant in space
EDIT
I can't see the comments for some reason but IT IS NOT Empire Strikes Back. It was a creepy horror vibe and they spent the entire movie inside the creature.
I can't focus on multiple components/rules when doing tasks. Please help me!
I was buying chicken at the grocery store today. I specifically needed 2.5 lbs of chicken thigh. Each package of chicken has a different weight, so I need to do some math and find two that add up to the weight I want.
I found one package of chicken thigh that was around 1.3 lbs. That means I needed another that weighs 1.2 lbs. I spend several seconds looking for one that weighed 1.2 lbs, found it, and put it in my cart.
When I got home I realized that the other package was 1.2 lbs of chicken BREAST, not chicken THIGH like I was supposed to get. I was so focused on finding the correct weight, that I forgot about buying thigh and not breast. The task of "finding 1.2 lbs weight" pushed everything else out of my head.
How do I fix this?
[Discussion] Task initiation gets harder the more I delay, even if the task isn't hard
If I have something that I've been putting off for a few days (maybe it wasn't a good time, maybe something else came up, maybe I started but didn't make much progress), then I each time I try to start it, the harder it is. I feel an "urge" or "taboo" against doing the task. I feel like there's some reason why I "shouldn't" do it, maybe it will go wrong.
The more I delay, the stronger the urge gets. Sometimes the urge is so strong that I can physically feel a "tingling" in my chest (not a tightening).
It's irritating because I feel this for tasks that should be very simple or even enjoyable. Such as scheduling a followup with my doctor or opening a present I bought for myself.
Task initiation gets harder the more I delay, even if the task isn't hard
If I have something that I've been putting off for a few days (maybe it wasn't a good time, maybe something else came up, maybe I started but didn't make much progress), then I each time I try to start it, the harder it is. I feel an "urge" or "taboo" against doing the task. I feel like there's some reason why I "shouldn't" do it, maybe it will go wrong.
The more I delay, the stronger the urge gets. Sometimes the urge is so strong that I can physically feel a "tingling" in my chest (not a tightening).
It's irritating because I feel this for tasks that should be very simple or even enjoyable. Such as scheduling a followup with my doctor or opening a present I bought for myself.
"Slow buildup" horror movies that lead to some terrifying realization?
Just saw Arrival with Amy Adams, it was good but the whole time I expected it to become a horror movie. Either the aliens would attack them when they first entered the ship, or when they finally translated the message it would be a declaration of war or something. It's a very unsettling atmosphere, which is intentionally misleading.
Are there any films like this where it DOES turn out to be something horrible?
Is "ผู้ร่วมงาน" or "เพื่อนร่วมงาน" used more commonly for "coworker"?
If I wanted to describe somebody whom I work with but isn't really my friend, do I say ผู้ร่วมงาน or เพื่อนร่วมงาน? I would not call them เพื่อน but it seems like เพื่อนร่วมงาน is more commonly used
Also why is it ผู้ + ร่วมงาน and not คน + ร่วมงาน, when do I use ผู้ over คน?
Of course when introducing their full name you'd say "Sir Michael Caine". But if you're chatting with them, is it precedent to add "sir" at the beginning of all of your sentences?
E.g.
>Them: "Do you live here?"
Me: "No sir, I don't live here"
Or
>Them: "Do you live here?"
Me: "No I don't live here"
For example if you're in the military talking to a superior you'd say "Yes, sir, that's correct", or in the US addressing a judge "No your hono(u)r, I didn't do it"
Whenever follow a recipe, it doesn't turn out well, and I ask for advice, the replies just say "It's a bad recipe"
Whenever I follow a recipe but change some things because I didn't like them/it was more convenient, wanted to make more portions etc: "Why are you changing the recipe?"
E.g. pressurecookrecipes.com is consistently recommended here as a reliable source of recipes, but every recipe I've tried from there has had way too many steps that didn't turn out well, complicated the dish, and made the dish worse. Cutting out these unnecessary steps actually made the recipe better.
I was chatting with the table next to me at a cafe, somehow it came up that I'm interested in academic Biblical studies (I am not Jewish). One of the guys said he was Jewish and we were talking about some stories in the Bible. Eventually he mentioned that he (a white Jewish American) went on holiday to Ethiopia once and was amazed to learn about Ethiopian Jews there.
I was just trying to keep the small talk going, and said something like "It's interesting how Judaism spread there, given that it's historically restricted to one cultural and ethnic group". In hindsight I'm not sure if this was offensive to say? Perhaps there was the element of "mansplaining" his own religion to him, or saying "your population is so small and isolated" idk
where to get very big meat on a stick like they have in medieval faris