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apropostrophe

I can't really blame them for that mistake though, as everybody seemed to believe that Liebgott was Jewish and, by all accounts, he didn't keep in any contact with Easy after the war. Since much of Ambrose's research came from interviews and accounts of the men, if they all believed it to be true, he didn't really

Sobel's later life was pretty damn bleak. The kids weren't there, sure, but I can't blame them for wanting a better image of their father left behind.

Yeah, I wish they did too.

I was mad when they killed him off on Roswell.

Have you listened to Eion Bailey's interview? I find Webster a kind of frustrating, inconsistent character (more due to writing than acting, probably) but his was an interesting one. I know Webster wasn't the most popular guy among the company, and he sort of acknowledged that, but the way he defended Webster and

His hair even loses its coloring. It's an impressive and heartbreaking transformation.

Really, if you're going to get a role due to nepotism, the fresh-faced replacement officer straight out of West Point who hasn't seen any real combat and is treated rather warily by the more established cast/veterans seems just about perfect.

I think Cobb looks a little like Cameron from Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

It's one of my favorite little moments between the two of them in the whole series, really.

I hate metaphors. That’s why my favorite book is Moby Dick. No frou-frou symbolism. Just a good, simple tale about a man who hates an animal.

wtf is the cw lol

I'm really digging those interviews. I don't think I'll ever listen to all of them, but I wish we could've heard from Frank John Hughes, Kirk Acevedo, and Ron Livingston. They're really interesting all the same.

There are so many moments in this episode. People have mentioned a lot of them already, but Muck and Penkala, there one moment and blown to hell the next really stuck with me too. Just awful.

Huh. I never got the impression that Doc Roe was using the morphine for himself. What made you think that?

1) I didn't watch the original run so I can't speak to this one. I have been watching the DVD's from the metal case also, so I assume we've got the same one.

I can't think of a single criticism of this episode, to be honest. I love the characterization and portrayal of Roe. The shot (above) of him waiting, bracing himself against the tree as the men disappear out into the snow is so wonderful and so telling without hitting anyone over the head with anything.

It's also an interesting scene because Roe's the only one in the series to truly criticize Winters and be right to do so. The men under his command don't, and don't have reason to—he's practically super human. When his superiors (Sobol, say) do, we will always side with Winters between the two. Roe is in a unique

I go back and forth between the two also, but I think I have to give it to 'Bastogne.' (SPOILERS FOR THE NEXT EPISODE) I also think 'Bastogne' allows 'Breaking Point' to work as well as it does, setting up just how bleak and desperate everything is for these men. It makes Hoobler's joy over his Luger that much

Cersei totally confused me in this episode until I realized she was sucking up to all the judges for Tyrion's trial. Mace Tyrell gets his daughter a throne, Tywin Lannister gets the dutiful daughter who will do anything for her family, and Oberyn Martell sees a humanized, grieving mother experience the same kind of

I'm glad his career has come back, because it is a fucking terrible movie. I used to work at my college's tv studio where my job was literally to play movies. It meant I wound up watching a lot of movies I never would've watched otherwise, for better or worse, but I think that's the only time I was tempted to quit