Really, O'Toole as Priam retrieving the body of Hector was easily the best part of that movie and deserved to be in a much better movie.
Really, O'Toole as Priam retrieving the body of Hector was easily the best part of that movie and deserved to be in a much better movie.
Again: the Borgias. Not that I they demanded anyone stay alive so far as I know, but then, it wasn't exactly sweeping the Emmys.
I really liked Dana, I like Morgan Saylor, and I hope I see her again on another show - perhaps one with other good young actors like Mad Men or Game of Thrones.
Dude Ron Glass is right there.
I wouldn't say it's flawed. He's citing examples of episodes commonly held to be the best, that's not the same as declaring them the best.
She did. It was very brief, like a couple of seconds of her getting up out of bed.
Bought that a month ago, keep meaning to watch it. Studied it briefly for a course once.
Nothing is written.
I watched the whole show over a few months this year, actually. I feel I have a reasonable grasp on the mythology but my issues are less 'I find this hard to follow' and more 'they're just spinning their wheels at this point', if that makes sense.
Showtime can't interfere with historical facts, you say?
There are many candidates for best Farscape episode, but "Crackers Don't Matter" remains one of the most popular and ubiquitous examples, I guess to the extent there's a consensus it's that one.
"The Balance of Terror" also qualifies for TOS. I can't tell you how often I've seen best of TOS polls go down the wire to just those two episodes. They sort of neatly reflect a divide in fandom, as "Terror" is the more important universe-building episode and has a tense space battle with a morally troubled…
I'd probably still go with "Peter." That was the episode that sold me that the show wasn't just good, it was great, and it's the emotional heart of the whole thing.
It's a little overrated. I feel my biggest problem with it is it doesn't cut Abed explaining his dice roll every time it happens - this is precisely the kind of repetition other 'repeated event' episodes of other shows try to either abandon or liven up with shooting from different angles.
I also find this a more emotional episode. I figure Jurassic Bark probably impacts people more who had a dog.
Nazis had no official religious doctrine. This was however a position advanced within the Reichskirche, which was an attempt at unifying the Protestant churches of Germany into one national church (which as official as that sounds is still not OFFICIAL, as obviously many Nazis weren't Protestants at all - not least of…
Well there were Nazis who said the Galileans were pure white Aryans as opposed to the Semitic Judeans, so yes.
But Aragorn considers it his right to be king of Gondor because he's descended from the kings of Arnor pretty much from the moment we meet him. By the point Aragorn has proven himself at Minas Tirith in the movies, he's already accepted that he will be Gondor's King.
Though where-ever Evangeline Lilly goes, love triangles are sure to follow.
Aragorn as a reluctant hero as less to do with myth and more making him palatable for audiences who aren't sold on the idea of sacral kingship.