avclub-2681b2f5d67c7abeb59a8625ae0df5e8--disqus
david brainthesizeofaplanet
avclub-2681b2f5d67c7abeb59a8625ae0df5e8--disqus

**SPOILER WARNING**

Upvoted because you're either a meta genius, or you've accidentally made an Archer & Armstrong joke while pinging off the AA reference in a way the original poster hadn't intended (smart snark in itself.)

She was Danny's age when Danny vanished. Ward was a few years older. So she's around 24-25. Harold died a few years after he killed Danny's parents.

I imagine they also made a few additional cuts to the episodes for showing on PBS. Clement Poesy's first sex scene is pretty much akin to Sofia Helin's first sex scene in Bron|Broen.

I actually liked this take on the core narrative, in part because it didn't run overlong like the US/Mexican THE BRIDGE (in fact, they trimmed out stuff because the episodes are 44 minutes as opposed to the 55 minutes of the original Bron|Broen.) The characters are approached slightly differently, particularly with

Coming late to this, but quite enjoyed it. HAVE GUN is one of my favourite television shows, and I'm probably picking up the complete box set when it comes out in a couple of months (I have four seasons in the original DVD release.)

In the books Hassler wanted the protagonist's wife badly enough that he had her abducted and then unfrozen *years* before the protagonist…and conned her into marrying him. When yer man woke up, she was ten years older. The subplot was resolved with Hassler sacrificing his life to save the wife and kid.

"A Quake, A Quake" still gets me laughing, but I lived through what inspired it.

Excellent recaps. You might want to take a look at RIVER, by the way. Supposed to be excellent, and it has Stellan Skarsgard.

Well, it was inevitable. He'd already been in FIRE WALK WITH ME, so the Lynch would have worked with Bowie's noted absorption ability to turn him into David Lynch by now. Next step on the path: Bowie teams up with Angelo Badalamenti.

I'm as straight as a Roman road, but I do feel a little sadness over that.

However, the revelation of the film reels didn't include the secondary revelation that the book, in the original novel, had — that the alternate reality depicted in the film reel is itself not the same as ours.

My reaction to him at the end of Quantum Of Solace was that he's actually playing David Callan, from the ITV series CALLAN (and the associated movie.) He's practically a spiritual twin to Edward Woodward's character, with the cynicism and hard-edged insouciance.

No, the cancellation of Deadwood was David Milch, who wanted to get going on JOHN FROM CINCINNATI.

I like Longmire, and it was probably 10% of the reason I signed up for Netflix, finally (after leeching an ex-girlfriend's account for a time; she didn't care.) The Marvels shows were another 40%, and there was enough otherwise to account for the other 50%, though if they have another couple of purges like October's I

What, not Terry Austin, Ed Brubaker, and Tom Taylor?

Eight episodes in and the TV show is much better than the books…which wasn't a high bar to get over, admittedly, and they haven't exactly gone far over it. Mediocre at best, as episode 8 demonstrated thoroughly. If they follow the events of the last book, the remaining two episodes will be the second hour of a fast