avclub-02be845a15ff79338f340d49a0e71f1e--disqus
DonBoy
avclub-02be845a15ff79338f340d49a0e71f1e--disqus

When I was a kid, the actual Mme. Tussaud's in London featured, in its entry hall, a guard who was so convincing that I walked up to it to ask it a question and then screamed in surprise when I realized it was a dummy.

Deleted for not remembering the difference between a polo shirt and a short-sleeve sports shirt.

But the line before that is "Obi-Wan never told you what happened to your father", which brings to mind "the person Luke has in his head as my father", and what happened to him.  Unless "what happened to him" was "he got cuckolded", it makes no sense, whereas "he became the monstrosity who just cut off your arm" does

I really couldn't get over that.  They did an entire arc whose point was that the supposed fundamental premise of their show - that the flash-forward was truth — was wrong.  And then they just dropped it.

You can see her in "Lip Service", which looks to be "The L Word Scotland", on Netflix — at least last I looked it was there.

Which reminds me that when Walter stripped (without talking) in the bathroom, I thought he was going to say to Skylar "OK…now YOU prove you're not wearing a wire."  Remember, he hasn't heard from her this whole insane day.

Or maybe a trained stunt baby as seen here:

I'm guessing that @avclub-1c68bca0b57f83732bdb4e2dea8a24d7:disqus meant to come up with the name "Adam Scott".

Current state-of-the-art fan spec is that Hurt will turn out not to count as a "Doctor" because what he did "in the name of Doctor" was so bad that the later ones took his number away, thus deDoctoring him.

"Lots of planets have a Scotland."

And this whole subthread is why A Separate Peace is the most emotionally resonant book from my required reading in high school.

You gotta love the fact that Tom's dream includes Doug Jones, who plays (the voice of? motion capture of?) Cochice.  (The tall guy on the couch in the faculty lounge.)

Oh, I certainly understand why the story here is about Perry.  No argument with anything else said, also. 

My only churlish objection to the end is that we're focusing on Cox's grief in the presence of Ben's two sisters, who I'd think have a stronger claim.  Which is not to deny Perry his feelings, but as the review mentions, they're comforting him.

That's why it's not odd; the whole point is to pressure cable companies to carry the new network FXX.

Like this?  [Warning: RIPD ad up front.]

I reeeeally wanted this to be good, but what an incoherent mess.  Seems like we missed a few minutes of setup leading to the shootout in the mine, near the mine, whatever — Nolan having raised an army since we last saw him.  And I guess Irisa's whosies attacking everyone wasn't worth showing, just telling about.

[weeks later]

I misread that as "As do you", and wondered how he knew.

True fact: after EW ran an early Aniston cover, they printed a reader letter whose entirety was: