I just saw the following trailer for the filming of "The Witcher" (Netflix).
It will say from about 0:30 "Chaos is the most dangerous thing in this world but without control, chaos will kill you"
That is not a contradiction, but a logical consequence? Therefore, for me one and much more appropriate - but that (in the original "but") fits in my opinion not.
Could this indicate bad dialogues - that the series will be a flop? Or am I just doing unnecessarily petty hair-splitting here?
When Gerald bangs his girlfriends again, the movie will definitely be a success. Then the party goes off more than in game of thrones.
Why should it be like this?
Chaos means fun, leisure, joy?
Control means discipline, obedience, work, diligence.
What would a world in which only control prevail? Which is set by one instance for all?
Out with self-determination about his own life. Out with unfolding of its own strengths or interests. What others thought would be the right thing for everyone.
The balance is important.
It is a mystery to me how one can conclude from a single sentence to consistently bad dialogues. Films of this genre are usually seen less because of the polished dialogues.