Mario Goetze
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Voir les contributions MenuCitation de: Baron.de.Münchhausen le Juillet 09, 2012, 11:30:23 PMEt puis sans doute des meufs aussi alors que c'est une histoire entre couilles ... Mais bon au moins pas un truc de A à Z :sweat:
Oui moi aussi, quand j'ai lu tes dires j'ai sauté au plafond.
Bon après il va rajouter des scènes, par exemple on va y voir legolas, qui n'existait pas dans le roman.
CitationLa France se fait désormais payer pour emprunter de l'argent
Un prêt obligataire de 6 milliards d'euros a été souscrit lundi à un taux d'intérêt négatif. Une première qui s'explique par le nombre toujours plus restreint de pays qui ont la confiance des investisseurs.[/infos]
http://www.liberation.fr/economie/2012/07/09/la-france-se-fait-desormais-payer-pour-emprunter-de-l-argent_832125
La voilà la solution pour rembourser la dette
CitationThe project has been envisaged as two parts since 2006, but the proposed contents of the parts has changed during development. MGM expressed interest in a second film in 2006, set between The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.[123] Jackson concurred, stating "one of the drawbacks of The Hobbit is [that] it's relatively lightweight compared to Lord of the Rings... There [are] a lot of sections in which a character like Gandalf disappears for a while. From memory—I mean, I haven't read it for a while now—but I think he references going off to meet with the White Council, who are actually characters like Galadriel and Saruman and people who we see in Lord of the Rings. He mysteriously vanishes for a while and then comes back, but we don't really know what goes on."[69] Jackson was also interested in showing Gollum's journey to Mordor and Aragorn setting a watch on the Shire.[124]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hobbit_%282012_film%29#Structure
After his hiring in 2008, Del Toro confirmed the sequel would be about "trying to reconcile the facts of the first movie with a slightly different point of view. You would be able to see events that were not witnessed in the first."[11] He also noted the story must be drawn from only what is mentioned in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, as they do not have the rights to The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales.[125] Del Toro also added (before writing began) that if they could not find a coherent story for the second film, they would just film The Hobbit, stating "The Hobbit is better contained in a single film and kept brisk and fluid with no artificial 'break point'."[126] By November 2008, he acknowledged that the book was more detailed and eventful than people may remember.[127] He decided to abandon the "bridge film" concept, feeling that it would be better for the two parts to contain only material from The Hobbit: