August 04, 2018, 06:28 PM
Ken226Alpha
It will be out in Imax in a couple weeks. Given what Hollywood has been offering up lately, i can't help but be pessimistic.
I'm hoping for a good, family friendly movie that isn't chock full of gay sex, polical correctness and subliminal messages about the utopia of liberalism.
https://youtu.be/uIxnTi4GmCohttps://youtu.be/SlL_6bDSd8EAugust 04, 2018, 08:34 PM
vinnybassCautious optimism here. The premise has promise, but as you've already noted there is a lot of potential for it to go PC-stupid in today's climate.
August 05, 2018, 11:53 AM
Ken226They were chasing something that looked alot like bison, in Europe, 20,000 years ago. I had to look it up, but i guess there were indeed, ancestors of bison there, about that time.
I read some articles pointing to evidence of human bones having been found with wolf bones as far back as 400,000 years ago.
Evidence of fully domesticated wolves showing genetic deviation from wolves, the first dogs, living alongside humans as much as 45,000 years ago.
It's thought that the cro-magnon alliance with wolves allowed a comparative advantage, that may have had a role in the extinction of neanderthals.
It's a really interesting subject. The human love of dogs, and vice versa, is probably even on some level deeply rooted in the genetics of both species.
For thousands of generations, the human tribes who had domesticated wolves, had a comparative advantage over the competition.
It used to be thought that dogs were descendants of grey wolves, but modern genetic testing has disproven that. Dogs and grey wolves are sister taxon.
Grey wolves and dogs both share a common ancestor. Apparently, both dogs and grey wolves, as well as the Eurasian Wolf, descended from a now extinct late stoneage Eurasian wolf.
https://www.nature.com/news/an...n-of-the-dog-1.17607August 05, 2018, 12:02 PM
FenrisDog is man's better half.