![]() ![]() Memory function engages many different parts of the brain simultaneously.ĭamage to brain structures that form the limbic system, such as the hippocampus and thalamus, can lead to amnesia. As a result, most adults cannot recall events from early childhood.Īny disease or injury that affects the brain can interfere with memory. A young child’s language and memory are still developing. ![]() People can either acquire it or be born with it.Īnother type of amnesia is childhood amnesia, or infantile amnesia. Prosopamnesia: The person cannot remember faces.Alcohol-induced amnesia: Also called a blackout, this is when a bout of heavy drinking leaves a person with memory gaps.Source amnesia: A person can remember certain information but not how or where they got it.Posthypnotic amnesia: A person cannot recall what occurred while they experienced hypnosis.The ability to remember commonly returns within minutes, hours, or days, but the memory of the triggering event may never come back completely. The trigger is usually a traumatic event. They may wake up and suddenly have no sense of who they are. Fugue or dissociative amnesia: Rarely, a person can forget both their past and their identity.Amnesia can be an important indicator of concussion. This type of amnesia is usually temporary, but its duration often depends on the severity of the injury. The person may experience a brief loss of consciousness or coma. Traumatic amnesia: This refers to memory loss resulting from a hard blow to the head, for instance, in a car accident.This is very rare and more likely in older adults with vascular (blood vessel) disease. Transient global amnesia: This is a temporary loss of all memory and, in severe cases, difficulty forming new memories.In rare cases, both retrograde and anterograde amnesia can occur together. Retrograde amnesia: In some ways the opposite of anterograde amnesia, retrograde amnesia is when a person cannot remember events that occurred before their trauma, but they can remember what happened after it. CINESCOPE GODZILLA FULLThe person will have their full memory from the time before the injury. This usually results from brain trauma, such as a blow to the head that causes brain damage. Anterograde amnesia: A person with anterograde amnesia cannot remember new information.Amnesia can be temporary or long lasting. Some features of different types of amnesia can overlap, and a person can have more than one type. So by a sliver, I give the nod to Real 3D.Īnyway, hope you liked it as much as I did! I will probably go back and see G v K one more time, in 3D.Several different conditions involve amnesia, and there are many types of amnesia. Especially in the big fight scenes loaded with SFX, the Real 3D was crisp and deep and added a layer of visual envelopment that IMO transcended the larger scale/scope of the DC presentation. Most critically, while the out-sized titans would seem to be a perfect fit for the taller DC screen, and they did look awesome on it, I was very impressed with the clarity and depth of the 3D presentation. Not up to DC standards but more than adequate. ![]() First, while there was no seat rumbling bass, the soundscape of the 3D version was excellent. But I think I actually liked the Real 3D presentation even better. My seat rumbled constantly, LOL, a good thing. The titans and their SFX looked great on the bigger screen and the rich DC soundscape was immersive. And the DC presentation was as good as expected. No, it's not The Godfather, or even a sophisticated Marvel action film, but it delivered the goods.Īs for DC and 3D: Usually, Dolby Cinema is my favorite format for a film outside of IMAX 3D. Wailing away on each other and buildings and other creatures like a song with a great guitar solo outro. Like a pop song with a verse-chorus-versus-chorus-solo-chorus structure, we get people-titans-people-titans-little bit of people and a lot more titans. It delivers on the big over the top rollercoaster thrills I wanted. But I saw it in both Dolby Cinema and 3D versions, so just wanted to add my two cents about that.įirst, like many, I liked this film. I know it's kind of redundant reviewing a film many saw over the weekend and has already been commented on by many as well. ![]()
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