10 Confusing Movie Endings Finally Explained [Video]

The hardest part of a script to nail is the ending. Everything has been building up to this one moment, and if the writer doesn’t deliver, the movie could be doomed. Audiences love finality in movies, and prefer it if they understand what happened in a film. But sometimes, the conclusion throws them for a loop, and they’re more concerned about figuring out those last moments than anything else. Here are Screen Rant’s 10 confusing movie endings finally explained.

Featuring:
Inception – 0:28
American Psycho – 0:57
No Country For Old Men – 1:25
Interstellar – 1:53
The Wrestler – 2:25
Shutter Island – 2:51
Total Recall – 3:23
2001: A Space Odyssey – 3:52
Birdman – 4:22
Memento – 4:51

[Screen Rant]


Free eBook: How to Troubleshoot Low RAM or Memory Leaks in Windows

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If you’re wondering why your computer is slow and where all your RAM is going, this eGuide is for you!

The amount of memory or RAM available on personal computers has increased steadily throughout the past decades. Many factors have pushed an increase in memory usage, and laptops shipping with 8 GB RAM is now a common sight. Yet, those users involved with heavy duty processes, such as game design or video editing, are likely to need more still.

Of course, RAM has its limits. Your system capabilities are limited by the amount of RAM in use, as one of a number of factors. What happens when you have low RAM? Or how about a memory leak?

Let’s take a quick look at what RAM is, and what to do when a number of RAM-related issues arise.

[Free eBook: How to Troubleshoot Low RAM or Memory Leaks in Windows]

Wikipedia Search Engine Costs Wikimedia Chief’s Job

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The head of Wikimedia’s parent organization has resigned over plans to create a search engine. Contributors were upset about both the move itself and a lack of transparancy over the plans.

Lila Tretikov announced her departure as executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit organization that oversees a range of websites, most notably Wikipedia. She had been in post for just under two years, during which she was credited with reversing a decline in the number of active volunteer editors.

The goodwill associated with that seems to have been hit by leaked plans for Wikimedia to build a “Wikipedia knowledge engine.” Although the organization responded by suggesting the idea was simply to rethink the internal search tool on Wikipedia, both the wording and numbers quoted in funding documents gave the impression the idea was to more explicitly compete with the likes of Google and to index material from outside the site. One explanation was that the goal was to build the largest search tool that had no commercial motives or influences whatsoever.

Not only were many Wikipedia editors upset at what they saw as an unwise attempt to change the organization’s focus, but the fact that plans had been developed without user consultation also rankled. The dispute appears to have become something of a proxy for the wider debate about how much Wikimedia should be run as an open transparent community and how much in the style of a major tech company with a traditional management structure.

Physicist Explains Gravitational Waves In a Beautifully Simple Way to Colbert [Video]

Watch as Physicist Brian Greene explains Gravitational Waves to Stephen Colbert in a way that anyone can understand. I’ve watched several videos explaining the discovery since last week, but none as simple and beautiful as this one. Just watch.

Warning: This will BLOW Your mind.

[The Late Show with Stephen Colbert]

Rated R [Comic]

A fantastic comic by Scott Johnson of My Extra Life. When I saw Deadpool last week, there was many parents in the audience who brought their young kids to see the movie, and to my great relief, more than half left after about 5 minutes. The problem is that here in Quebec, Deadpool is rated PG-13 and not R like in the U.S. and the rest of Canada. I have no idea how the organization that rates movies here came to this conclusion, but it’s definitely wrong.

Maybe the french translation of Deadpool is milder language-wise, but I still wouldn’t have my kids watch it.

ratedr

[Source: MyExtraLife]