avclub-30016cd5b9045be8de99ad5f1cbfd9af--disqus
Lovely Bones
avclub-30016cd5b9045be8de99ad5f1cbfd9af--disqus

Oh yeah, the wolf head scene is incredibly tense. The film is at most intermittently scary, but to call it not a horror movie is to misunderstand it. There's a good Brian Collins essay about that.

Roll With the Changes is thematically perfect for the film.

He's described in the novelization as being akin to Elijah Wood's character in Sin City.

In Treatment is fantastic, dude. John Adams was pretty good too.

Or the final reunion season/movie for Deadwood because Olyphant and Dayton Callie are finally free? Yes please maybe?

Uh, I have no idea why my response was deleted. It was with my other account, the general disqus one, because of Disqus' stupid glitching, and for some reason it was under moderation. Don't know why that happened. Sorry.

The new Avengers animated series is at least sort of canon for the MCU.

"Oddly, the widely rumored casting does not appear to be confirmed. Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige told the crowd, ‘If it were confirmed, we would have announced it today.’”

And I see that someone already made this argument, my apologies. The funny thing is I already read extensively through these comments, don't know how I missed it.

I don't know about the Star Wars casting quite having this issue, at least not entirely. John Boyega from Attack the Block isn't exactly big, as much as he deserves to be. Or this Daisy Ridley person. And the tremendous but delightful weirdness that is Adam Driver, I don't think anyone casts that guy just because he's

I've never seen him give a good performance in anything, honestly.

Lau is very clearly set on fire along with the money he's on top of. I can see the argument for the chase scene even if I don't see it personally. I love that chase scene. And I think that cutting back to the party after they crash on the car would break the film's momentum and be completely unnecessary. It doesn't

The thing in the movie that large numbers of nerds on the internet have endlessly and annoyingly talked about for the last six years? Yes, nobody else noticed it but you.

There's an interview where the one who chose Hausu explains his reasoning, (and I'm with him) and the link I gave above has the one who chose The Fury explaining his reasoning.

Men Behind the Sun, a film about the torturous medical experiments performed on prisoners of war by Unit 731 during WWII.

Now, see, again, I don't agree at all. I adored Aaron Eckhart and Harvey is the second or third best part of the film for me. That being said, I would really love to see West try the role too.

I'm quite fond of Nolan's direction, personally, but never mind that. I absolutely agree that the latter is the more intriguing prospect, and the more likely one, I think. I'm absolutely convinced that Harvey was always supposed to die in TDK. It's too important to the film. Also you can't, with the realism style of

Definitely, though Selfless would benefit if they had just killed Anya at the end of it, especially considering how she's resolved in the rest of season 7.

Finding out hurt me too, man. I'm sorry.