4th option.
4th option.
"Look, it does not matter what he is saying,"
The problem is that, there's no tension. We know shit's gone south because we saw it in the first movie.
I'm sorry 63 million people felt the same way.
It's a good movie but tying into the Cloverfield "universe" wasn't really necessary. I think it would have been stronger as a separate thing.
Eh. You take the good with the bad. Free speech is, unfortunately, a double edged sword.
This show and reason have not been in the same zip code since some time around season 2.
I don't know what's going on in the header photo (caption say's it's a Klingon but I'm dubious) however, it looks like a Dr Who villain circa 1983.
They're gonna Ratner this aren't they?
Well, the book doesn't specifically talk about Mad Sweeney but IIRC the original Essie Tregowan story from the book talks about how the pixie used to be worshiped and sacrificed to thousands of years ago but gradually the belief in that god faded and transformed the entity into one of the faerie folk while the…
Presumably Mad Sweeney was some type of paleolithic nature deity that "devolved" into a leprechaun as myths changed.. The book touches on how that can happen.
I've given less and less thought to the book as I've watched the show. I think I've reached the point where I'm going to start treating it like its own discrete entity, encompassed within the same universe as the book but playing out in a different, and equally valid way.
It was 1979. That was the Iranian revolution.
Until I saw them in the same shot I didn't realize how much I wanted to see them work together.
Wednesday accelerating and smiling as he runs over the rabbits had me rolling.
Barb's death was perfect trope subversion ("Sex equals death","Virginal girls always survive the killer") and it kind of disappoints me that many fans of the show (whom I think would be more genre savvy) don't seem to notice that and want to undercut it by bringing her back.
That is explicitly named as an influence by the band. Basically during The Bends tour they would be reading and watching Hitchhiker's Guide during their downtime and references to the work would creep into their writing.
It is not on Netflix
Vir probably has the largest arc of any of B5's characters from bumbling comic relief to unassuming agent of resistance to savior and leader of his people all while retaining his essential "Vir"-ness. The fact that the audience never really questions how this person ends up in such a drastically different place than…
In that case, my answer is Ummagumma