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Harvey Harvey Harvey Dent
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For unknown reasons, I enjoyed this episode so much that I was prepared to say it was the first great one since "Goodbye, Michael." I'm having a hard time qualifying that opinion right now, but all I know is I laughed at this one harder than I have at any Office episode in a long while.

That scene would probably be more legitimately funny that anything in last night's episode.

I agree with most of this comment.

"In the finale, Holly Flax will show up alone, and the notable absence will be unremarked upon."

Favorite lines:

There was a sequel a couple years ago. The original was 2006. So yeah, I'm still pretty young.

Thanks for recognizing that Hoodwinked was actually pretty clever; it was one of my favorite movies as a kid.

This is depressing for me, only because I fear that this will already be out before I find the time to watch Inception again.

Wow, I've never thought of that, but suddenly it makes a lot of sense. I will take this as an excuse to rewatch those three movies this weekend.

Thank you. I agree with every sentence of this. Except for how Bruce Wayne survived the explosion, since they kept going on and on about the autopilot. I'll give you that it was a stupid editing trick to show his face five seconds before the explosion, though.

The Dark Knight made a lot more sense than Rises, you have to give it that at least. For me the only part of the plot that maybe didn't work perfectly was Harvey Dent's transformation into Two-Face. That and the last scene when Batman decides to take the fall for Harvey. Slightly ironic that my only problems with the

On 7 November 2008, former Batman Mayor Hüseyin Kalkan began looking into the possibility of suing Christopher Nolan, director of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight, and Warner Bros., distributor of the films, claiming the studios had been using "Batman",
the name of the superhero, without permission from the city, and

On 7 November 2008, former Batman Mayor Hüseyin Kalkan began looking into the possibility of suing Christopher Nolan, director of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight, and Warner Bros., distributor of the films, claiming the studios had been using "Batman",
the name of the superhero, without permission from the city, and

I would watch this, but I don't have cable.

I would watch this, but I don't have cable.