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1New entries on the bottom. Beware '''spoilers!'''
2
3[[foldercontrol]]
4
5[[folder:Switching out the Blank]]
6* How did [[spoiler:Oliver]] turned into a Blank? He was never touched by a Blank for them to get his DNA whilst Gary, Andrew & Peter were the ones being licked[=/=]kissed[=/=]groped by the Blanks, yet only [[spoiler:Peter]] turned into a Blank with him?
7** First off, they don't "turn into" Blanks - As evidenced by the scene [[spoiler:in the bunker underneath the World's End]] and [[WeHaveReserves the same Blanks that had been destroyed turning up again]], the Blanks are duplicates. Secondly, at the sixth pub, [[spoiler:Oliver heads into the Gents on his own - he was replaced when he was away from the rest of the group]].
8** My guess would be that when a Blank grabs someone's mouth, [[spoiler:they're uploading their consciousness to the Network, where it is then stripped of anything that makes it human and downloaded to a genetically identical body. It's the same mind, it's just altered - if that weren't the case, the Network's offer of being made physically perfect and "retaining chosen memories" would be meaningless.]] So whether or not they are "turned into" Blanks is a matter of perspective - they are consciously, but their new bodies are completely separate from the originals. [[spoiler:This would also explain why Gary, Andy, and Steven's duplicates are kept in storage, as they don't yet have a mind to fill them.]] But to answer the Headscratcher, [[spoiler:the hand-to-mouth action probably forcibly obtains DNA as well as brain information for when more subtle tactics fail or simply aren't necessary.]] As for [[spoiler:Oliver, his birthmark doesn't come back until he returns from the Gents, and he starts acting happier and a lot more comfortable with the peril he's in - he no longer objects to being called O-Man, or the other four's advances towards his sister. He also gains uncharacteristically strong drinking stamina from that point and is the only character of the five who never gets drunk. It's pretty obvious he changed in the toilets.]]
9[[/folder]]
10
11[[folder:Marmalade Sandwich]]
12* What was the point of the Marmalade Sandwich? It's explained that even leaving saliva from an empty glass is enough DNA for them to use. By the Marmalade Sandwich scene the boys had left empty glasses at several pubs.
13** To separate everyone and try and entice them into willingly joining up.
14[[/folder]]
15
16[[folder:Reverend Green]]
17* What exactly happened to [[spoiler:"Reverend Green" after he gets a call from the supervisor?]]
18** It appears that he was a [[spoiler:human collaborator but when he gave Gary too much information he was "mulched" and replaced with a blank. It's obvious that he's a blank at the end when he speaks with The Network's voice.]]
19[[/folder]]
20
21[[folder:Identifying Blanks]]
22* How did the guys in the Rising Sun know that Gary's compatriots were Blanks?
23** Their faces were scratched up, showing the Blanks' signature blue from the damage. Possibly their posture and demeanor gave it away as well, since most of the Blanks run and walk like they have a stick up their butt.
24** The scratching makes sense since several of the toughs in the bar had things like "Human" etched into their heads.
25** Also of note is that their skintone seems quite... off, giving off a kind of deathly pallor.
26[[/folder]]
27
28[[folder:Time Skip and Epilogue]]
29* How much time elapsed between [[spoiler:the Network leaving]] and the epilogue? [[spoiler:Andy]] doesn't look that much older, yet he's telling the story to a group of kids like they don't know [[spoiler:where the blanks came from]].
30** Keep in mind that, as far as the viewer knows, [[spoiler:the general population of Earth remains unaware of the Blanks' origin. It's possible that Gary, Andy, Steven, Sam, and the surviving collaborators are the only ones who had any previous interaction with Blanks, and certainly very few people knew of the Network itself.]]
31** But Andy gives them a WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue, so definitely at least a few years have elapsed. And remember that there's widespread prejudice against Blanks, so word has gotten around. I'd say these are either local kids and he's filling them in on their history, or they're from an isolate area and haven't met Blanks before.
32** WordOfGod: The original pub crawl happened in 1990, the second in 2010, the DistantFinale in 2020.
33** Except that doesn't add up at all. Andy specifically mentions being four times over the limit in December 1997 when they get to the Smokehouse, as well as the several mentions of his being sober for sixteen years, which would put the second pub crawl in 2013, the same year as the movie's release.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Growing up and not]]
37* Does it bug anybody else that there's a running theme of [[spoiler:Gary needing to grow up]], only to let him [[spoiler:live out the ultimate adolescent fantasy (be a kick-ass adventurer in a post-apocalyptic wasteland with versions of his friends in their "glory days")]] at the end?
38** The entire point of the movie is that to err is human n' junk. The movie is less about Gary growing up than it is Gary moving on from his dwellings on the old days. Even though he's living out a childish fantasy, it seems to make him happy so like yeah. Read the quote from "loaded" on the main page.
39** He was moving on and finding his own new glory days, albeit in a childish manner and with [[spoiler:the Blanks of his old friends as teens]]. He was making his own happiness rather than trying to revive good times that were long gone
40** That confused me too. I'm just taking it as a handwave, as [[spoiler:obviously there isn't as much "growing up" to do when you've effectively ended the world and are living in a wasteland]]. It was the only part of the movie that stuck out like a sore thumb though.
41** In this troper's opinion, that was a very deliberate choice with a purpose. Gary overcomes his problem with alcohol, comes to terms with his grown up self (symbolized by his destruction of the young Gary Blank), but remains clearly in touch with his past as well. The theme that Gary should grow up was present, but it was not as simple as that. For all his flaws, he had good qualities including his charisma and nostalgia. But again, just this troper's opinion.
42** Along with going from alcohol to water, Gary finally learned to care for his friends [[spoiler:even teenage, Blank versions]]. He took them under his wing [[spoiler:and defended them against Blank discrimination in the bar]], when before he didn't care that his friends had been bullied or were unhappy.
43** Only as he grew older and became an alcoholic did he stop caring about his friends; during the opening montage when Shane smacks Peter with his backpack Gary leaps to Peter's defense.
44** A bit of AlternateCharacterInterpretation / UnreliableNarrator is present here, however, since we're essentially seeing Gary reflecting back on his own life, where he's positioning himself as the cooler-than-thou white knight who everyone looked up to. There are some implications that Gary's reflections and testimony on their shared past is not entirely to be trusted, since his friends appear to have plenty of fairly valid reasons to hold grudges against him (although it is likely he wasn't ''entirely'' uncaring towards them either). At very least, then AND now he appears to have been rather self-centred.
45** Also, he now seems to have a purpose in his life, which he had been sorely lacking before and was the cause of most of his personal problems.
46** It has to do with his conversation with Andy in The World's End, and Andy's ending narration: he has something to fight for. His friends had their families, jobs, etc. worth fighting for; Gary only had his friends and good times, both of which he'd lost. By the end of the film, he's got both of those back, albeit in different forms than before.
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Least civilized]]
50* The Network complains that humanity is the least civilized race in the galaxy, and so when it leaves the Earth it destroys what little civilization we do have?
51** Not entirely sure that was deliberate. If all our information technologies were planted and sustained by the Network, an EMP may just be what happens when they stop and leave. At least, I didn't get the feeling they were deliberately spiting Earth... Alternately, the Network was trying to sabotage Earth so they couldn't make the rest of the galaxy worse.
52** Without technology, humanity won't be able to go into space and screw up the Network's enlightened civilization.
53** It's stated the Network didn't arrive until 1990, the night of the pub crawl [shooting star]. We got to space in 1961, almost 30 years before the Network arrived.
54** It didn't arrive in Newton Haven until 1990. The Network has other colonies on Earth, as they said when confronted by Gary. It's anyone's guess how long they'd been here.
55** Getting into space =/= getting to other habitable planets.
56** It destroyed all technology, not just post-90s technology.
57** The chances of humans reaching any extrasolar world were slim--the destruction of the world's industrial infrastructure would probably make it outright impossible, or close to it.
58** The Network is consistently shown to be a massive hypocrite. It curses and rants while accusing humanity of being uncivilized, and it's plan to uplift our species involves mass genocide. Destroying all modern technology just to spite us is totally in character for it.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Gary being a man child]]
62* Is Gary always a ManChild, or is he just trying to act more like a child for this one night?
63** He acted just as cringingly cocky at the AA (rehab? whatever) meeting, he apparently hasn't held a real job, and he still dyes his hair black and wears that duster around...I'd guess he's an actual ManChild.
64** I'm not sure. He was wearing normal clothing at the rehab meeting, and only went and went into his teenage goth mode once he was reminded that he never finished the Golden Mile. [[spoiler: It's safe to assume that the rehab meeting he was attending was due to his attempted suicide: "'Help' was a lot of people sitting in a circle talking about how awful things have got."]] If anything, the meetings were making him feel *worse*, which made the idea to attempt the Golden Mile an appealing one [[spoiler: possibly by ending it all right afterward.]]
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Last pint]]
68* Why was Andy so insistent that Gary not have that final pint, after all the other ones?
69** Last straw thing, isn't it? I'd want to smack him for the actual trying to drink a pint at the Hole in the Wall. It's idiotic and infuriating that he'd keep trying to finish the crawl when there wasn't even the excuse of keeping their cover from the Blanks anymore.
70** I'd also imagine that, since he's just learnt ''why'' Gary is so insistent on completing the pub crawl, it's a sort of attempt to try and get Gary to take the first step to moving on with the rest of his life.
71** Also, according to the Word of God, when it comes to Gary getting dressed in his old goth clothes, it was like he was a soldier dressing up before committing suicide. So, this troper believes by looking at that detail, one can assume that Gary's attempt to do the Golden Mile was meant to be another suicide attempt via alcohol poisoning (as at a couple of the bars on the route, he drank more than just one regular pint. He drunk at least a pint and a half at the Famous Cock and about a quarter of a pint before he had to get himself a new one during the Beehive fight). So, by Andy trying to keep Gary from completing the Golden Mile with that last pint, he thereby is trying to keep Gary from killing himself.
72*** Make sense , it's possible that , "the Golden Mile" is indeed Gary's "bucket list" , and this trip , this one specific trip , was meant to be he doing the last attend to finish it , before put a end on everything.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Controlling planets]]
76* Does the Network control all the planets that it showed off when showing how barbaric Earth is, or did the planets send the Network down to Earth. Who controls what?
77** Considering Gary gave the middle finger to the Network, we'll probably never know.
78[[/folder]]
79
80[[folder:Understanding and replicating technology]]
81* Do no actual humans know how 21st century technology, or even electricity, etc. works? The Network supposedly only arrived 23 years before, in 1990, so why has technology regressed so far with no organized attempts to get it back?
82** It's not about it being regressed--it's about all the stuff that did exist not working anymore. So nobody can turn on their computer to retrieve the designs to build more computers. The computer-controlled drilling systems no longer work. Industry and manufacture has been destroyed.
83** Human tech will probably get back up to speed within a few hundred years, because a lot of people would remember basics of how stuff worked, but the lack of resources and mass communication would be a hindrance.
84** I may sound outdated, but what about about books? Handbooks, designs, specs, manuals. Surely all that still exists on paper? Also, if it was an EMP blast, then how could it have destroyed ''all'' the technology? Sure, it would've regressed quite a bit, but Middle Ages? That seems quite a stretch.
85** Bear in mind that the pace of technology has been extremely quick during the 20th and 21st centuries. In the early part of the 1900s, we hadn't even developed flight. Over the course of a single war, we went from biplanes to jet planes. Middle ages might have been an exaggeration, sure, but it's as much about losing those stepping stones as it is the technology itself - knowing how to make concrete doesn't mean you necessarily have the resources to get the materials to make it. And some places would be entirely dependent on continual modern maintenance (Las Vegas for instance has no natural water) on a scale unavailable post-Network.
86** There's a bit about exactly this in ''Literature/WorldWarZ'', where one of the survivors points out that pre-zombie-war root beer had ingredients coming from all over the world, so even something as simple and ubiquitous as ''soda'' became impossible to manufacture. So, sure, someone might have schematics and notes to make computers, but without planes, trains, automobiles, and a phone, he's not going to be able to get the materials to make it.
87** There's a well-documented sociological phenomenon known as "deskilling" or "McDonaldization", which talks about how modern day tasks have been stripped down to their bare basics. In other words, every worker finds himself contributing only a very small part to an overall machine, in order to make workers more expendable/cheaper to train. This has the downside of making all of us very sufficient on the apparatuses that control these "assembly lines" we all work in. With communication down, how many people in industrialized countries have the skill to rebuild any modern tool without somebody else to provide us with instruction, assistance or raw material?
88** Thing is though, people have been preparing for an EMP attack since the Cold War, and more and more so as we've grown dependent on advanced technology and solar science has learnt that the Sun unleashes them on a regular basis. It's not going to take long before government officials will be rolling out the back-up computers and hard drives and the repair technicians that they have on-hand for this sort of scenario. The world'll probably take a few years to get entirely back on its feet, but then again there's also a load of 'non-human prisoners of war' bumbling around full of blue that could well be spirited away to try to gain insights into the technology used by 'the bastards that did this to us' that could well give a boost in developing new computer technology.
89** Realistically, Earth post-Network should be able to get back to late 20th-century technological levels in a few decades. There's no indication that printed records were destroyed, so blueprints, books, and written tomes of knowledge are still available. And even an EMP would not destroy fundamental components such as copper wiring or steam mechanisms. Assuming basic government organizations are still intact, something like wiring up England with a telegraph network should be doable in a few months. Everything else is just a matter of time.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Scars]]
93* Gary clearly has a scar through his right eyebrow, evidence of his hard life since graduating, and also gets a red wound in the center of his forehead when he smashed it into glass during the first fight. Both of these are ignored when his friends demand proof that he's not a Blank.
94** For all they know, the Blanks can fake minor injuries to convince people they're human, whereas a scar that happened long before that night is more conclusive proof.
95** They've all agreed at this point that blanks have blue blood and cannot replicate scars or remove birthmarks.
96** See the 'drunk and paranoid' bit below, then. It's not exactly conductive to coherent or logical reasoning.
97** Plus, they're a bit drunk and paranoid by this point.
98** They instantly remove the previous group members from suspicion for showing off a scar, and then accept Gary for simply doing something stupid, so they're not that paranoid.
99** I said "a ''bit'' drunk and paranoid", not "hopelessly and insanely consumed with paranoia". They're paranoid enough to demand proof from Gary that he's still human, so clearly any existing evidence isn't convincing, and then when he furnishes proof they're willing to accept, they drop it. Simple.
100** Well, a particular scar they know the precise location and history of is surely a better proof than a previously unknown one (and they didn't actually touch any of the scars - just looked at them).
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Masking the fight]]
104* What exactly is it with the hand dryer in the first blank fight and the alarm bell in the second? At first thought it might seem like they are trying to mask fight, but that would make little sense, consindering that pretty much the whole town consists of blanks and they all know what is going on. Personally I think it's simply a matter of RuleOfCool to imitate the VoiceOfTheLegion bellows they emit while being controlled by the Network directly. Anyone got a better idea?
105** It's as you said, it's to mask the sound of the fight, but not for the characters, for the audience. If they didn't do that, then the audience would question how did the rest of the pub not hear the fight and the twist of the entire town being Blanks would be more easily worked out.
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Basil]]
109* What happened to [[spoiler:Basil? He escapes the World's End with the other survivors and takes off on his own, but the entire town of Newton Haven is then destroyed in an explosion. The only possible way he could've made it out in time is in a car.]]
110** So we don't know whether they died or not? I'm unsure, actually, how Sam didn't have any noticeable grief over her dad brother
111** Considering that [[spoiler: Ollie and Peter]] are shown in the epilogue sequence when they would have taken the explosion at point blank (pun absolutely intended) range, perhaps it wasn't as lethal as it appeared to be. Sure, you see everything burned and apocalyptic in the aftermath scene, but who knows - maybe it's some weird alien explosion technology that doesn't hurt people?
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Random DNA samples]]
115* How did the Network get the DNA of the boy that Sam liked? At first I figured that they already had him as a blank, but if that was the case then they should have known that he was already dead. The fact that his actions (and fate) were insofar unknown to the network means that he couldn't have still been in Newton Haven in the months surrounding his death (in which case it's also unlikely he was a collaborator like the Reverend Green, or else they wouldn't have let him leave).
116** As soon as he is introduced, Steve says "They must have had his DNA on file".
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Overpopulation]]
120* Two words: carrying capacity. Sixty million people, two hundred thirty thousand square kilometers, shaky climate (which seems to have worsened with the catastrophe), no electricity or (if Andy's to be trusted) cross-channel trade, infrastructure in ruins - how does this add up to anything other than mass carnage? The explanation some have offered is that enough people were replaced by Blanks to make up for it, but that only makes sense if many of the "access points" were major cities, which seems hugely thematically inappropriate.
121** Whose to say it doesn't end up that way? We only see a few scenes of how our main characters live, we don't know how the rest of the country is fairing.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Britain and Europe]]
125* On a related note, how did destroying the electronics cut off Great Britain from Europe? Can no one build so much as a canoe anymore?
126** As I recall, it's not that they were completely cut off, it's just that no one knows what's going on beyond a certain radius from where they live because communications have been cut. All of your news would be word of mouth in a post-apocalyptic society.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:EMP]]
130* Finally, as for the electronics themselves, what exactly did happen to them? It's been referred to in many places as an "EMP," but any electrician could get the generators and simpler machines up and running after that. Batteries being drained by shorts would do a number on nonrenewable resources, but that wouldn't mean a complete end to electronics.
131** It's about the amount of people having access to them. There will be some people who can make generators, but those people will be few and they cannot travel to other places to make others with the parts needed as easily. So when they are saying it is a complete end to electronics, its pretty much true since that statement effects the vast majority of the population.
132** Anyone with the skill to re-build generators etc in a world like that would be valuable, as would actual re-built generators. In a world where an axe wielding maniac can walk into a pub and kill its occupants with seeming impunity, you'd think people would be a little cagey about that sort of knowledge or tech falling into the wrong (or right) hands.
133[[/folder]]
134
135[[folder:Number of pubs]]
136* Just why does a small town have that many pubs to begin with?
137** You'd be surprised.
138** I'm guessing you're not from a small town in England then.
139** Yeah I'm American pretty much.
140** To put things a little in perspective, I live on the outskirts of a English town called Barnsley. In just over a mile we have:\
141The rose and crown (1), The Victoria(2) The white bear (3) The Worsbrough Common Working Mens club (4), The Prince (5), The Warren Hotel (6) The Silkstone (7), Park Road Club (8) The Ship Inn (9) The Mogul Room (10) The Outpost (11) The Button Mill inn (12) The Rising Sun (13) The Tykes Sports bar, Chicago Rock (14) The Silverstone pub (15) Escapade (16) Wild Cats (17) The Soviet (18) Joseph Brahammers (19) The Corner Pool (20) The Ice Bar (21) Shakespears (22) Che bar (23) The Londoner (24) Esmeraldas (24) Voodoo (25) Walkabout (26) and many many more. These are just the ones I can remember off of the top of my head. I've missed at least 10 other pubs that I can't recall the names of. Basically, we Brits like to our pints and our pubs. I'm rather surprised that a small town actually only has as much as 12...
142** It may not have had just twelve, its called the Golden Mile, which could be assumed to be from pub 1 to 12 as adding up to exactly a mile door to door, maybe they had other pubs, we are never told how large the town actually is seeing as they walk (or run) to each pub.
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Headquarters location]]
146* Why is the Network headquarters in the World's End? It makes sense from a character arc point of view, but not so much logistically. Depending on its level of control, wouldn't the Network have set up either somewhere more remote, like a random house, or somewhere more central, like town hall?
147** There could be several access points throughout town for the local base of operations, one of which just happens to be under the World's End. Alternately, there could be several bases that would normally be more or less empty - all of the Blanks apparently being in that one could just be because the Network knew Gary planned to wind up there before leaving town.
148[[/folder]]
149
150[[folder:Not Finishing the Golden Mile]]
151* I get that without this goal, there is no movie but: one beer at each pub, for 12 pubs? Totally doable! You wouldn't even have to get totally wasted, if you chat and spend an hour at each pub with your drink and your mates.
152** Point of order: It's 12 pints, not 12 regular bottles. That adds up to an extra 48 oz., or 4 extra whole beers. So it's more like 16 beers over the course of an evening -- something not all 18-year-olds are capable of. Also, they did shots at one place, got into a fight in another and then got high, remember. Also, an hour at each of 12 pubs is 12 hours. Bars tend to close at 2 a.m. at the latest, and they were starting in the evening. Their goal wasn't, "get through each bar at a relaxed pace and have a quiet evening," it was to blaze through the whole thing on the trail to glory.
153** Regarding the above, a British pint is 20oz, not 16 so it's even more. In 1990 all pubs (almost no exceptions) closed at 11pm. In 2010 12pm might be more usual
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder:Not Doing the Golden Mile Alone]]
157
158* If completing the Golden Mile was so important to Gary, why did he invite the others? He could have done it by himself.
159** He wanted to re-enact their first attempt of the Golden Mile (since it was "the best night of his life") and it wouldn't have been the same without his former friends. When he ''does'' attempt to finish it alone later, it is only because he doesn't have another choice and he would have preferred the others to be with him.
160** For him,it's NOT about "finishing the Golden Mile" , it's about "finishing the Golden Mile ""WITH"" the boys".....just like the ol' times.
161
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Last movie of the series?]]
165* Did Wright really say this was the last of the Blood and Ice Cream series? I really would like to see more and a 6-year gap between this and Hot Fuzz makes me think it's probably not a permanent decision.
166** Wright and Pegg have both referred to this, ''Film/HotFuzz'' and ''Film/ShaunOfTheDead'' as being a trilogy. So I guess it is pretty much done. You can still watch ''Film/{{Paul}}'' as a SpiritualSuccessor though.
167** Simon Pegg said he wanted to do a ''Shaun of The Dead'' sequel called ''From Dusk Til Shaun'' where Shaun fights vampires but said it never got past pub talk.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:What exactly are The Network offering Gary at the end?]]
171* They seem to be offering to kill him and replace him with a younger robot or do they have some kind of BrainUploading technology that will put his mind into a younger body?
172** It's BrainUploading, which explains why the Network is able to create endless copies of people already dead. But it's not ''complete'' uploading--the Network can't copy every single memory, so they essentially pick the best ones they can find. Since Gary sees his first attempt at the Golden Mile as an eighteen-year-old as the best night of his entire life, the Network is deliberately tempting him with the chance to not only get his teenage body back, but remove all of the negative thoughts and experiences that followed.
173[[/folder]]
174
175[[folder: Replacing the old and dead with young, healthy robots]]
176* The blanks are meant to replace the people they kill but why would you replace an old man with a young looking duplicate? At one point, the gang point out that one of the blanks is based on a man who is publicly known to have died.
177** If you're referring to the Network offering Gary his teenage body back, that was a very specific case where it's trying to tempt him into stopping his resistance (and preventing him from going public about the Network's existence). Since Gary doesn't seem to have many friends outside of the gang, it's likely that he wouldn't be missed. As to the dead man, that was the Network panicking--with [[BrokenMasquerade the masquerade broken]], it was desperate to get the DNA of the gang and kill them as soon as possible. To that end, the Network scanned the memories of the people already killed, learned about Sam's high school crush, and replicated him immediately--without considering that he might have died in the meantime.
178[[/folder]]
179
180[[folder:Dead brother]]
181
182* I understand Sam might have been in fight-or-flight survival, but wasn't she mildly aware that her brother was dead? It seemed like she would have at least had a moment of reaction considering they were close.
183** Her reaction when Andy destroys Blank!Oliver's head seems to be all she needs to put two and two together.
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:Why Blue?]]
187* So, the Cornetto Trilogy is based on the Cornetto ice-cream cone treats, and supposedly, the films correspond with the main flavors of the cones:
188** Strawberry = Red, which equals blood, which symbolizes Film/ShaunOfTheDead.
189** Blueberry = Blue, which used in the term, "boys in blue," which is a nickname for police, symbolizing Film/HotFuzz.
190** Mint Chocolate Chip = Green, which is represented by ... What? The Blanks are all color-coded blue and even have cornflower blue blood. Shouldn't they have had a green color scheme?
191*** [[ComicallyMissingThePoint The Vegan Police from]] Film/ScottPilgrimVsTheWorld?
192*** LittleGreenMen, because it's the alien movie.
193[[/folder]]

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