In 200 years, the English language will consist of a series of squiggles.
In 200 years, the English language will consist of a series of squiggles.
My favorite Albert Brooks movie moment is probably him repeatedly explaining the "nest egg principle" to Julie Haggerty in Lost in America
It really is.
A giant corporation abusing a law meant to discourage frivolous lawsuits? Now I've seen everything.
I really hope that it's just a promo photo and doesn't have any relation to the actual production design.
Only two good things arose from this incident
God forbid people go to concerts to actually watch the show.
It's not a Star Wars movie unless it's merchandised to the point of absurdity.
I suspect the people doing those analysis are the same ones who say that the prequels are better than The Force Awakens.
The original isn't terrible. It's just mediocre. It has some really good bits but that's balanced out by some head scratchingly awful stuff. It's not so bad that it couldn't be fixed with another draft which is why it's confusing that they decided that this was the best they could do.
I agree. You really get a sense of just how friendly and open she was. It made her death seem even more tragic
Morally, it's reprehensible, but in a pure game theory sense it's perfectly understandable. If you hang Bayley out to dry, you upset the guards who've already threatened to walk during a very unstable situation. Blame it on MCC and you'll find yourself out of a job and possibly a career. Upset the prisoners, they…
I actually know one of these people. His justification is that it's better to get it over with and burn it all down so we can start fresh than continue the long slow slide into the morass. I can't say that approach doesn't have some appeal.
Not to be pedantic but St. Vincent *is* Annie Clark. The band she plays with is just Annie Clark's live band
If you're just average at what you do, the best way to stand out from an equally average herd is to develop a gimmick.
Thoughts and prayers?
You could have just listed who was alive at this point.
I hope it fails for one simple reason: I want the property back in the hands of the Marvel. It's been obvious for a while that they're the only ones (Deadpool being the exception but that's largely due to the creative team's passion for the project) who know how to do a good comic book movie anymore
The contact high you get makes it worth the effort