Seriously? There are people who didn't like the roofie cycle?
Seriously? There are people who didn't like the roofie cycle?
And their competing literal slogans.
The Narrator's best moment was in the first George Michael episode when he fills the awkward silence by laying out George Michael's thought process in excruciating detail.
Played by Henry Winkler's son.
The thing about Rogen is for most of those flashbacks he wasn't given anything funny to do. He was just there saying lines. I can think of only two clear comedy moments he had: the Baby Tock (which WAS funny) and "We have the best fucking attorneys."
Uh-oh, it's the blowback!
Where there was once Anthony Quinn and once Benicio Del Toro, there is now Gael Garcia Bernal, Hollywood's new Universal Brown Person.
Don't forget about the robot driving instructor who travels back in time for some reason.
I'm guessing they wanted to premiere them just prior to the Emmy deadline.
Not a single mention of Dawes being on Letterman tonight? Failures, all of ya.
Calling Sarah Paulson a supporting actress is a rather brazen bit of category fraud.
JFK is a riveting film that consists almost entirely of exposition. I think aside from the Garrison domestic scenes and the immediate assassination aftermath, everything else in that film is characters explaining stuff to each other.
Hasn't been renewed beyond that. When the cast was having contentious contract negotiations over seasons 24 & 25, there were a bunch of articles that seemed convinced season 25 would probably be the last. That seems not to be the case though, since I gotta think they would've announced it by now if it were.
Hey, lay off the Greeks. They invented civilization.
The TV show definitely explains who Bob is. They don't really explain the backwards talking though, at least not in any way beyond "That's just what they do."
I hear people talk all the time about how the movie works better as a standalone, but that has always seemed completely insane to me. The only way it can possibly make any sense is if you watch it already knowing who Bob and Mike are, because the movie sure as hell never bothers telling you.
The Waitress' role is already being recast.
Footage of Brandon Lee's death was destroyed after all the court matters concluded. Surprised something similar didn't happen here.
Does anyone here have similar attitudes towards The Crow? Please note that I haven't really looked into either incident and am therefore ignorant of the particulars. Maybe they're different enough to not be worth comparison. This was just the first thought that entered my head upon reading this thread.
But that seems a strange standard. If not being an in house production is enough to not be considered an HBO original series, then quite a few shows (such as Larry Sanders) also wouldn't count.