avclub-4c3234969de88733665691017afdbbb1--disqus
sansho1
avclub-4c3234969de88733665691017afdbbb1--disqus

Knowing that Dexter wouldn't die in the crash doesn't mean they shouldn't have milked the cliffhanger.  Yes, we can roll our eyes at the unlikelihood that the main character would perish midway through the season, but at least it could have been structured so as to leave us wondering how Dexter would come out of it. 

LinkTV is showing the series from the start beginning tonight at 9.  Two episodes every night.  Finally I can check this out!

Also, LinkTV is running Borgen from the start of the series, two episodes per night beginning tonight at 9.  I've been hearing about this one for a while.

Jonah Hill was likable and appreciative of his success, but after a while the Hollywood-speak (everyone is the greatest, or the funniest, or the nicest person in the world) got old.

Not to mention the expert framing, perfect focus, and remarkably steady hand.  I'm not sure I would have advised a medium shot on Deb's body block, as the difference in size between her and the assailant was difficult to ignore and momentarily distracted from the action, but that's just an aesthetic quibble.  At the

It wasn't even "pink stuff", it was something like "A tiny shot of pink, and Harrison's okay." A truly odd thing to say.

I agree this was a really good episode.  I still maintain that the show is spinning its wheels at this late date, but bringing aboard old pro Charlotte Rampling was a great move.  It's a pleasure to watch her effortlessly commanding presence. 

Not in any rational scheme of perception.  Judgment of any system or a priori relation of phenomenae exists in any rational, or metaphysical, or at least epistomological contradiction to an abstract and empirical concept such as "being", or "to be", or "to occur" in the thing itself or of the thing itself.

Of all the venerable anti-hero stories drawing to a close, Dexter is by
far the least essential, because it's obvious there's been no
overarching plan.  Deb killing LaGuerta truly left this show with
nowhere to go.

His son made the drawings that evidently came from the dump site.  But you hit upon the one problem I'm having with the show right now — the two threads are separating with each passing week.  The death row scenes are becoming more (pardon the pun) self-contained, and while I'm enjoying that aspect of the show a great

"Good afternoont!"

I think it has something to do with the fact that 90+% of comedians don't see a lot of money from their chosen path, and even most of those who do likely spent years wondering if it would ever happen.  That's the kind of crucible that fosters a close-knit community that places a high value on concepts like hard work,

I'm very late to this and need to catch up.  Are we or are we not acting as though Will Arnett is funny?

Best line — Don stumbles into a partner's meeting he was unaware of, sits down and immediately says, "Are we done here?"

This was the weakest episode so far for me.  Maron's expressions of exasperation and/or resignation to life's indignities are great — admitting he's a cat person to an alpha male, acknowledging the dildos in his dishwasher, etc.  But it's still a stretch for him to carry a plot through an episode.  

I just started on slashfilmcast and I'm enjoying it quite a bit.  Although, while I value Tasha's opinions when she's on, her voice is so modulated that it drives me up a wall.

I started to laugh despite myself at Dawn's misery, and once I started I found I couldn't stop (so I totally get you, Dawn!).  I imagined the producers sifting through day after day of footage of Dawn crying over nothing, and finally deciding, "You know what?  She's gonna cry regardless, so let's see how awful we can

Who would have guessed that, after weeks and weeks of being a nonentity, Brenda getting blindsided would be such a gut punch? 

Hope Seth's not too squirrely.  You know how he gets.

But I think the other fellow is only a straw man to those who'd seen a previous version of the show.  To the audience in the special, his haughtiness was a real characteristic, and so the laughs the bit generates are of a cathartic variety.  I agree that the twist makes it a more poignant, finely observed moment, and