avclub-58e58fe1e6be95e8c5e41d9ce861ca1c--disqus
nzmccorm
avclub-58e58fe1e6be95e8c5e41d9ce861ca1c--disqus

Hollywood has been rebooting movies incessantly basically forever. Count yourself lucky it isn't the thirties or forties, where the time it's taking to reboot Spiderman would be viewed as excessive.

Actually, increasingly Friday is used for effective counter-programming. If you put on a drama with a cult or strong following, you'll scoop up a lot of the meaty goo left behind by the drop in viewers and minimize your losses.

Kotor 2 was better than the first one in pretty much every way, other than the final dungeon.

Who knows? After he failed to save her?

I think maybe it's because Saving Mr. Banks was based on true events, whereas 50 Shades of Gray is something that James doesn't have much real ownership of because it's porny fanfic.

My money's on her being the Master's companion. The Witch's Familiar to Clara's Magician's Apprentice.

Depends what you mean by executive produced. Did he do logistics? Was his the desk the buck stopped at? I mean, Stephen Moffat got EP credits for Coupling, but he wasn't showrunner in all but name on that. It was just for the purposes of residuals and replays.

Yeah, but she should've immediately gone off on him for it because he genuinely put her baby at way more risk than the baby just being with a slightly drunk Archer.

The most english name is Tuppence Middleton.

He wasn't showrunner. I don't think the IT Crowd actually had one.

I kinda like that aesthetic better than the American one. American SF looks too flashy and plastic.

Actually, I'm probably younger than you. I just, kinda, y'know, like television. And I've studied it academically.

He said that it was about paranoia and a feeling of being watched/controlled, with Orwell as his go-to reference.

To be honest, I mostly tuned his interviews out when I watched the show because he has a tendency to lob softballs and give slobbery knob jobs to whoever he has on.

No, I really don't think he's all that and a bag of chips. Especially since Colbert breaks character a lot. Compared to Cason, Early Letterman, even some of Conan's stuff… he's just nothing special.

They're not. Variety's talking about it, but both Marvel and Sony have been pretty clear that we're looking at Peter Parker. Unless talking about "the new Peter Parker" is a clever ruse.

I think that Miles will turn up, just not in the first film. Chris Evans is done as Cap in 2017 unless Marvel can entice him to change his mind, so Winter Soldier introduced Falcon and the Winter Soldier, either of whom could take up the Shield later. Similarly, Miles (and possibly others like Ben Reilly) are probably

The thing is though… I don't think that that's the case with a lot of them. Characters like, say, Mark Darcy in Bridget Jones, for instance, doesn't really have the development or humbling of his namesake. He's just kind of there to deliver Bridget. There are also films like You've Got Mail, where there's the illusion

No, Not really. He makes pretty entry-level late night-style jokes and mugs at the camera after playing clips his researchers dig up. That's not really unique or novel.

No, it's more like saying that Stewart doesn't have a unique voice because he's one of a generation of comics who grew up in the shadow of Johnny Carson, and that unlike many of the others he never fully came into his own.