I wasn't too far into the review before I was saying to myself, 'This is really well written. I like this'. Then I read the byline. 'Well of course I do!'
I wasn't too far into the review before I was saying to myself, 'This is really well written. I like this'. Then I read the byline. 'Well of course I do!'
Over the years that was my only comment on the show, that sometimes Stephen would over-estimate his guests' capacity to deal with the Colbert persona. I think he anticipated getting more push-back from certain guests and raised his Colbert-ness a notch or two. Then when that guest didn't come back at him with the same…
I just finished watching it On-Demand. It's fantastic! Rich and moving and funny and sweet.
I feel like Tony Hale must suffer from, "No guys, I'm being serious" Syndrome in his life. There wasn't a moment he was on screen that I wasn't laughing at him. He's so effortlessly funny.
They didn't show us. It seems Thorne would still be alive. The last we see of him is being dragged off the battle field into the interior of Castle Black, wounded, as he barks orders.
The reviewer failing to recognize Grenn and his moment at the inner gate was kind of heartbreaking. I liked that character and the scene, so to see him unacknowledged as a JAG was disappointing.
For all the macro view of the series, those small moments are among my favorites. I love that whole "Salute the rank" sequence. After Winters finishes talking to Sobel, he pauses, sits back, then glances over at Nixon who doesn't even look at him as he shakes his head ruefully. It's perfectly unspoken dialogue.
That "What's a guy gotta do to get killed around here?!" he spits out is so fracking cathartic and hilarious. Always gets a laugh through the tears there.
Now Jerry will never get into the Friar's Club!
Ever see him in Mr. Frost (enjoyable film, btw!)? Dude was completely shredded at one point! I was like, where the hell did this Jeff Goldblum come from?
My comment ended up being about F2P in general rather than mobile. Irrelevant! Excised!
Ron Livingston's finest hour. He's so good in that episode. He's great in the whole series, but spending that time with him, which he doesn't make easy…so good.
And then that single rap on the window - Thank you for mentioning that moment Donna, I derived far too much pleasure from seeing that snow fall away in one neat, complete sheet like that. I wonder if that was a one-shot, pizza-on-the-roof type of deal.
Walt only need make a small incision with a blade, perhaps under and along the paper seam, if it had one? A small piece of tape would re-seal it. To use them, one usually tears off an end or corner, yah? Packs like that are ubiquitous and innocuous, she likely wouldn't notice the tampering with the packaging at all,…
Reminds of a great Dennis Leary joke:
The only part of the episode that had me tearing up. It was a surprising betrayal by my eye-parts, because I'd already made it pretty clear to the rest of my body that I was upset with Walt!
Well played, yo
I remember seeing the promos for it and I was intrigued. For some reason, I really enjoy seeing actors play against type, and at the time Cranston was really only Tim Watley and Hal from Malcom to me. I figured I'd give the pilot a try.
And it brings us back to that moment outside Tuco's, after the fulminated mercury, and his near-orgasmic reaction to what he had just done. It was always about Walt chasing that moment, that juice.
Aaron Paul wearing a head cannon, I think, might make a better film than what we saw previews for tonight.