avclub-1d392d6cd50709b355aa35602cb1b7cc--disqus
SixtyForty
avclub-1d392d6cd50709b355aa35602cb1b7cc--disqus

Nope, the trick with the handcuffs is early on in the movie, right after the Horsemen pull off their first trick and Ruffalo starts his "investigation." The horsemen don't find out he was their unseen director until they complete their third trick at the end of the story.

You seem awfully worked up about a website feature that is pretty much completely harmless.

But Eisenberg didn't know Ruffalo was the one pulling all the strings, so he still would have had to have pulled off the trick by himself, would he not?

Martin Scorsese has done an AmEx commercial. I think Carrie Brownstein's credibility will do fine.

We're only 6 episodes into the season, guys. By sheer necessity of storytelling, this merger almost has to result in more conflict than it solves. Remember, we haven't really seen how any characters reacted to Don and Ted's scheming other than Roger and Peggy. The idea that this whole thing is too neat is an

Is there any reason why they would refuse in the first place? Varys and Oleanna still get to keep Sansa, "the key to the North," away from Littlefinger through a marriage to Tyrion. Sure, despite her protestations Oleanna does seem to have a small soft spot for Sansa, but Tyrion would probably do a better job of

Remember that one episode of The Sopranos where Junior kept trying to keep his sex life with his new ladyfriend a secret? He knew if his hyper-masculine mob associates found out he was going down on her, they would mercilessly mock him for it - it wasn't seen as something that a "real man" does in the bedroom. My

@avclub-9ff7c9eb9d37f434db778f59178012da:disqus I'll throw out Aiden Gillen as an example for the under-performing lot. I loved his work on The Wire but three seasons in I'm really tiring of his performance here.

Other than Ned Stark he does seem to be the only prominent dad on the show who clearly loves his child.

That didn't stop them from covering House.

So why doesn't the AV Club regularly cover Phineas and Ferb?

If I recall, it's not that Tyrion didn't take the warning seriously. It's just that Varys told Tyrion about it right as they were building up to the Battle of Blackwater Bay, which was a considerably more pressing matter at the moment - I believe Tyrion's exact words were "one war at at time."

Varys kind of became the main character of the show for this episode. I would be completely OK with more of that.

God bless John Slattery. All the guy has to do is grin and he gets the funniest moment of the episode.

Yeah, I'd definitely say it's easy to identify with Xander's feelings in this episode's final confrontation - but not with his words or his actions. It's one thing to feel irrational anger when you see a former flame with someone else, but by acting on that irrational anger Xander enters unquestionable asshole

I thought the cameos worked just fine. I'll give a series finale a lot of slack for getting overstuffed and a bit bloated, and 30 Rock didn't break my limit. I'm willing to sacrifice some flow to just enjoy being a fanboy for the last episode ever.

This was a Brian Williams cameo away from being a perfect series finale.

But it would make so much more sense to use a town like Mankato…

The early morning radio sketches confuse me because Shakopee, MN is part of the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area and thus it seems odd that the town would have it's own specific radio station.

Seth Gilliam, a.k.a. Sgt. Carver.