Sorry for the annoying question, but please ease my curiosity
Could you explain about that relationship what you talk about? Are British and American have a bad relationship?
P.S. I'm asian person who know nothing than jon snow.
TL;DR: U.K. is tsundere for U.S.
Slightly longer version: Thirteen Colonies,The American Revolution, Jay Treaty, The War of 1812, the American Civil War, The Great Rapprochement (Derederedere), WWI, Interwar Period, WWII, Indian Independence, Cold War, NATO, Falklands, Gulf War, Kosovo War, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gitmo Bay (vis-à-vis Chinese Uighur refugees), BP Oil Spill, Wikileaks... yep... mutual tsundere throughout history.
Americans prefer physical horror,that's why zombies,psychotic serial killers,sentient machines,exorcism are a thing in North American cinema market.Japanese however, likes psychological horror,so movies like Ju-On and The Ring are quite common.
Americans prefer physical horror,that's why zombies,psychotic serial killers,sentient machines,exorcism are a thing in North American cinema market.Japanese however, likes psychological horror,so movies like Ju-On and The Ring are quite common.
And special effect budget.
How about the difference between American and European horror (and porn) ?
Americans also like to kick horror's ass. Most spooks we have running around are defeated if not outright killed at the end. After all, we invented the Ghostbusters.
Slightly longer version: Thirteen Colonies,The American Revolution, Jay Treaty, The War of 1812, the American Civil War, The Great Rapprochement (Derederedere), WWI, Interwar Period, WWII, Indian Independence, Cold War, NATO, Falklands, Gulf War, Kosovo War, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gitmo Bay (vis-à-vis Chinese Uighur refugees), BP Oil Spill, Wikileaks... yep... mutual tsundere throughout history.
yeah America seems like always to side with the Brits..
Slightly longer version: Thirteen Colonies,The American Revolution, Jay Treaty, The War of 1812, the American Civil War, The Great Rapprochement (Derederedere), WWI, Interwar Period, WWII, Indian Independence, Cold War, NATO, Falklands, Gulf War, Kosovo War, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gitmo Bay (vis-à-vis Chinese Uighur refugees), BP Oil Spill, Wikileaks... yep... mutual tsundere throughout history.
We didn't start the fire...oh, wait, doesn't fit the meter.
Slightly longer version: Thirteen Colonies,The American Revolution, Jay Treaty, The War of 1812, the American Civil War, The Great Rapprochement (Derederedere), WWI, Interwar Period, WWII, Indian Independence, Cold War, NATO, Falklands, Gulf War, Kosovo War, Afghanistan, Iraq, Gitmo Bay (vis-à-vis Chinese Uighur refugees), BP Oil Spill, Wikileaks... yep... mutual tsundere throughout history.
How about the difference between American and European horror (and porn) ?
Depends, British, Italian or German? I'd say Littorio would put Iowa through some scare with Italian cannibal movies, Lucio Fulci's classics or the entire Giallo genre. To Iowa's credit, her country churned out some of the finest in the genre. Carpenter's The Thing is my favorite horror movie, ever.
Sorry for the annoying question, but please ease my curiosity
Could you explain about that relationship what you talk about? Are British and American have a bad relationship?
P.S. I'm asian person who know nothing than jon snow.
In terms of alliances, the US and UK are probably the two closest nations on the planet, militarily at least, mostly due to the fact that the US was a former British colony. That said, most Brits find it hard to tolerate Americans socially due to our rather... aggressive and bombastic nature, shall we say.
In terms of alliances, the US and UK are probably the two closest nations on the planet, militarily at least, mostly due to the fact that the US was a former British colony. That said, most Brits find it hard to tolerate Americans socially due to our rather... aggressive and bombastic nature, shall we say.
It also goes both ways because our societies are very different. British people (possibly europeans in general) like strong leadership, tight control, and uniformity at the sacrifice of individual representation. Americans like freedom (duh) but with that freedom comes a wide variety of very hostile factions, most notable being Americans who want traditional American ways, and Americans who want to be British (one world order/global government and such). In the last couple of decades this has caused a somewhat convoluted operating procedure for the country that most outside of the US are not aware of. Even the laws that are made or enforced dramatically change with each new president or congress, especially since modern politicians have a tendency to blatantly violate laws in order to serve their parties interests.