Deebauch
Deebauch
Deebauch

Whoever takes the time to link all these stories is the hero(/ine) of Halloween.

Agree on the first part, but remember when Hilary was asked to say something nice about him (groaaaaannn) and she said his kids had been raised well? That was hilarious.

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Listen, there’s zero point to remaking a movie with one of the greatest scenes in cinematic history.

Im heartbroken that there was no mention or clip of when she got accidentally slapped by Misha (I know he had a character with a name but whatever), as if that man has made any involuntary movement in the last like 50 years

I love the difference in how they look at each other in the last spot, he clearly is the supplicant

That is an exceptionally poor read of this individual video, Beyonce’s videos and work going back at least to the self-titled album, and their donations that we know about to pro-black, pro-justice orgs.

So to comment on the actual work that this post is about: HOLY SHIT keeping this a secret until now is wild, and a testament to how much Beyonce’s work ethic pays off. Of course they must have some scary NDAs, but she really does try to acknowledge and take care of her team. Seeing this sort of power at this moment in

Just say you can’t stand her/their success and keep it moving.

We’re lucky in Taiwan, it came out last week! It is glorious summer fun, and I felt like they intentionally corrected irritations I had with the previous movie. Give it a shot.

Are you (and OP) basing these comments on this articles and the preview? I’m genuinely curious if this is anyone’s takeaway after watching the movie? I was delighted to be wrong about how stupid it would be, and I can’t figure out if I’m in the minority or if the comment section is made up mostly of people who haven’t

How is good is Hammond’s death though? That and the hotel with the glass pyramids on the roof have stuck with me through the decades.

I mean, it’s weird to criticize a movie you haven’t watched for its craft or content. If you have money to throw at a ticket and want to spend 2 hours in someone else’s air conditioning, give it a chance. I went because I’m a sucker for the brand (and I know it!) but I found it hugely entertaining. I love not being

I guess it depends on a person’s ethics. If we create living things, some would say (and in the movies, several do) that we have a responsibility both to take care of them and keep them from harming everything that existed before them. The conflicts in this movie really centralize that question, to really good effect.

Have you seen this one yet though?
And as middling to awful as the sequels were, yes, I’d say each had at least one sequence that I enjoyed a lot (or in the case of JW, I loved seeing the park realized and then destroyed).

I can’t believe I’m doing this. But I love this universe so much, I can’t not do it.

Woah. This is a fascinating piece of info, thank you! I would have loved to see his take (I can’t imagine him with greasy black hair, just for a start!). But you know none of us regrets that he chose Planet of the Apes more than he does himself.

I dunno, the fact that his patronus is a doe was clearly meant to be touching. Even Dumbledore lets a few thug tears fall. This specatactulary fails to address the chain events (all of them Snape’s decisions) that led to his complete immersion in his Lily feelings. For younger audiences this takes on an unearned

OMG YES! Especially the last paragraph. I can’t stand the Snape Redemption Tour. I loved how we only got his memories, and Dumbledore’s recollections because they perfectly and richly explained his trajectory from Death Eater and then back again, especially since his loyalty was always in question until book 6 when he

I agree with your interpretation, although in the book we get his backstory at the same times that we do in the movies. However, the movies are kinder to Snape than the books, because they never show how into the Dark Arts he was, or how quick he was to call Lily a mudblood.

I’m madder than I should be about this article. David Heyman’s letter, written after the filming of the SECOND movie, just sounds like an empathetic supervisor acknowledging that there were hard days on the job. HOW would things Rickman wrote about David Yates and his work on the sixth film have any bearing on it at