affrosponge88--disqus
Affrosponge88
affrosponge88--disqus

If I'm drunk, then I'm also sober. Wait, what. If I'm drunk, then I can't be sober. Hold on. How can I be drunk if I'm as sober as I am drunk! Fuck. Why can't I talk like a normal person?!

More like Samurai HACK.

"You need to set your motherfucker to 'receive'."

*tugs collar*

Nobody's even going to bring up Spartan?

Because people need to see the good in Thanksgiving, let's look at one of the funniest episodes of television, where Ben Katz (voiced by H. Jon Benjamin) tries to make Thanksgiving dinner.

You say that to all the boys. ;-)

I fucking love Christmas.

*giggles* That tickles!

It was all a dream is one of the cheapest conceits in all of fiction.It was all a dream is one of the cheapest conceits in all of fiction.It was all a dream is one of the cheapest conceits in all of fiction.It was all a dream is one of the cheapest conceits in all of fiction.It was all a dream is one of the cheapest

:( I guess my time has come. Goodbye to all.

Anybody having trouble getting into TinyChat?

So close.

Basically, I liked this more than the first Hunger Games film, and that felt like a more complete film. So I would say the split did not hurt this film. I really like this franchise, though. So I'm just glad to see it only getting more and more invested in its politics, and not its love triangle.

The split actually adds weight to the rebellion at hand, which before this film was only mentioned in passing or symbolic by nature. They say war is hell, but the war won't start until the next installment and I think this is far torturous than that could ever be (in a good way).

Since I haven't read the books, I don't think I'm qualified to say. But I will say that while it felt superfluous at times, it felt like regular fat that could be trimmed, not fat created because it was stretching its own premise thin.
That being said, it is by no means a perfect film, and it does occasionally beat the

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay pt. 1

But it's a hilarious yell at Seth Cohen moment. It's actually one of my favorite episodes (of what I've seen) precisely because the farce is so good, even if the behavior is bad.

A feature-length (yes: 82 minutes) appreciation of one of this guy's all-time favorite films: