And the scene that initially does it

Furthermore, the scene that at first does it — I am not imagining this — includes Charlize Theron speculating the provenance of a strange bit of baklava. Her character, Andy, when also called Andromache of Scythia, has been around for around 6,000 years, having battled (and kicked the bucket, and return) in hundreds and likely a great many fights everywhere throughout the world. En route, she has been adored as a divine being, scorched as a witch, and spent time with Auguste Rodin.
In any case, at the present time, she sits with her little group of individual antiquated warriors (the other three have been around for just several years) and plays a parlor game: They give her a bit of baklava; she needs to utilize her endlessness of experience to make sense of where it's from. It's the sort of scene that would be a spur of the moment second in some other film or played for giggles. (Think the Avengers and their shawarma.) As coordinated by Prince-Bythewood, notwithstanding, it's warm, perceptive, calm — and subsequently vivid. For a moment or something like that, nothing else matters on the planet other than Charlize Theron and that bit of baklava.

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