I'd rather not see realistic zombie kids. As a new dad, it just can't handle it anymore.
I'd rather not see realistic zombie kids. As a new dad, it just can't handle it anymore.
I find the direction to be interesting. The absorbing of SCDP by McCann has essentially broken the partners. Some like Chaugh, are glad to bought off and others like Don, Joan, and Peggy know that any cash is small payment compared to what they are losing.
Just a shot of him falling down a flight of stone castle stairs would be worth its weight in gold.
How about he brings Bobby with him. Instead of replying "Dick Whitman" he says "Don White." When the waitress looks to Bobby for his name he says, "Walter."
Oh that would be funny. Just a pissed off Pete Campbell wandering around the Scottish moors. "Not good Bob!"
My favorite part of the movie, the only one I can stomach, is when Sherman comes and burns that whole sickening, vicious, racist, plantation society to ashes.
Yeah I taught a course in American history and when I got to Reagan one of my students said, "Wait a minute, my grandpa said Reagan was great. But actually he's kind of awful."
I loved Gaad's deconstruction of Stan. Such a realistic thing for an FBI chief to say. Stan basically went out and engaged in the kind of personal vendetta you'd expect from a spy movie and Gaad looked at him and went, "Are you insane?"
I don't consider him a joke as a politician, quite the opposite. It's a master course in crafting an image and building popularity. He's a first rate politician, it just so happens that he could also be monstrous.
Anyone else notice that aged Captain Rex looks exactly like a bald Ernest Hemingway?
I never once worried about Alison with the assassin in her garage. At this point she and Donnie are the greatest accidental homicidal maniacs the world has ever seen. There's no way had that shady guy attacks Alison that he doesn't wind up buried in that garage right next to Leaky. Does not matter how it would have…
Sort of like what Luthor did to Amazo in Justice League.
"Alfred, Lex Luthor is driving on our lawn. He must be lost."
Not to mention that unfortunate rainbow wig.
Tell me. Do you like nachos? Do you like football?
I APOLOGIZE FOR NOTHING!!!!!!!!
Perhaps not insignificantly to Don, the West is a place where you can be "A Man With No Name." A blank slate, with no past and no connections. While Leone and Eastwood's protagonist would not appear in "A Fistful of Dollars" until 1964, I imagine were Don to have seen it, he would have appreciated the character.
I cannot tell you how often I've attempted to fit that line into my own life.
Oh God you're killing me…
I always thought Kingdom of Heaven did a decent job of being spiritual. Looking at the question of what is truly "God's Will."