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La que se avecina (4x4)
Una argucia, una yonqui y un vecino al borde de la muerte
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TRAMA
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Pagina della serie
Data di trasmissione: 02/06/2010 (5758 giorni fa)
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| Coque, dolido tras su ruptura con Berta, decide acoger temporalmente a Chusa, una antigua novia toxicómana, para dar celos a la primera dama de la comunidad. Mientras tanto, Antonio redobla sus esfuerzos para descubrir al amante de su mujer entre los varones de "Mirador de Montepinar". Tras encontrar unas llaves bajo su cama, el primer mandatario centra sus sospechas en Javi. |
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VISIONE
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INTEGRAZIONI
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Recensioni episodio:
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COMMENTA L'EPISODIO
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December 21, 2012, came and went. Nothing happened. People woke up on December 22, made coffee, and went to work. The Mayan elders (who had been saying for years that the calendar end meant a "time of transition," not death) were vindicated.
So, did the "2012 end of the world movie" die on that date?
No. It did the opposite. It became a time capsule. 2012 end of the world movie
Today, the film is viewed as a relic of pre-2010s anxiety. It captures the fear of the Great Recession (2008), the terror of climate change denial, and the paranoid energy of the early internet. It is often compared to Don’t Look Up (2021) as a predecessor of "climate catastrophe cinema."
Roland Emmerich has since moved on (Moonfall, Midway), but 2012 remains his most financially successful original film (grossing over $769 million worldwide). It also launched the careers of actors like Game of Thrones’ Liam Cunningham (who plays the captain of an ark) and cemented Chiwetel Ejiofor as a leading man. December 21, 2012, came and went
When you type the phrase "2012 end of the world movie" into a search engine, only one title comes roaring back like a tidal wave carrying an aircraft carrier: Roland Emmerich’s 2009 epic, 2012. Despite being released three years before the date in its title, this film has become the definitive cinematic artifact of the early 21st century’s most famous doomsday prophecy.
But why, over a decade later, does this movie still dominate the conversation about apocalypses? Was it merely a spectacle of collapsing landmarks, or did it tap into a deeper cultural anxiety? This article dissects the plot, the science (or lack thereof), the historical context of the 2012 phenomenon, and the lasting legacy of the ultimate disaster film. When you type the phrase "2012 end of
What makes 2012 interesting historically isn't the movie itself, but the real-world hysteria surrounding the date.
Leading up to 2012, you couldn't scroll through the early internet (shout out to MySpace and Yahoo Answers) without seeing a blog about the Mayan calendar "ending." Conspiracy theorists claimed the galactic alignment would trigger a polar shift. Survivalist bunkers sold out.
The movie capitalized on that anxiety perfectly. It turned a vague archaeological date into a two-hour, $200 million panic attack. And then… December 22, 2012 arrived. The sun rose. We all went to work. The Mayans just ran out of stone.