
- JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK HOW TO
- JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK MOVIE
- JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK SERIES

JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK HOW TO
The older brother should have been more in charge and took and locked up the keys for more understanding like he first said, not listened to his dopey sister ( with no brains ) at all and that little don't know how to describe him but that little brother just an idiot. And giving any key to that stupid little brother especially alone, wow. Brains people, this is towards the writers, only so many times can a person be that dum without seeing their wrong and shouldn't tell anybody. Along with her little brother how dum can you be to tell everyone, that was so annoying. The sister, guess in something else she'd be good.
JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK MOVIE
That kid, let's hope he's never in another movie or show. The idea of the show was great, the way it was played was worse that horrible. What were the Tomatoes thinking giving that rating. WOW, I like to see what rotten tomatoes has to say about a movie but this one, it just sucked. While the show is interesting at times, there are far too many moments of frustrating and boredom. The show's best asset is muzzled from being an exploration of the creative and powerful ways to use the magic keys to instead act as a plot device to further the main story plot that is fuzzy and not as interesting. The stakes are ill-defined, the banter is canned and falls flats, logic is often disregarded to further the story (which contributes to the first complaint) and we can't help but feel that there is little payoff for all the time that's been spent each episode.
JOHN LOCKE THE THINKING ROCK SERIES
And yet, it's easy to find yourself disappointed by this series that seems to vacillate too quickly between the child-like wonder of Narnia and teenage angst, sex and quips of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, never seeming to settle on the perspective it wants to provide the audience, resulting in gratuitous snippets that cause far too much boredom in a plot with so much potential.


Set against a backdrop of tragedy forcing two teenagers and one child to move into an expansive 19th century mansion, the idea of finding magic keys that allow them to perform magical acts seems like a truly fresh take on a Narnian-esque adventure (in fact, there are two explicit call-outs to it's obvious inspiration). The show's most impressive aspect is the premise that it attempts to play out.
