In the movie, it's major cities across the world - NYC, Moscow, London, Hong Kong, etc.
In the movie, it's major cities across the world - NYC, Moscow, London, Hong Kong, etc.
As good as Franklin's arc has been, it's the Gustavo/Lucia one I'm most interested in. Gustavo is clearly much more perceptive than he lets on and knows his worth and Lucia will have a tough time being taken seriously by her family (although her uncle clearly sees her ambition). I also think her cousin Rafael won't…
It was a boarding school so the only people who didn't already live on campus were the day students. There were teachers serving as chaperones. It was more like an all-night pizza party for 100 students than the incarceration you seem to be imagining.
It's meant as a bonding exercise - as about half the students enter the school as freshmen and half as sophomores, the lock-in is meant to help the new sophomores integrate with the students who were there as freshmen.
My entire sophomore class saw Titanic during our lock-in that fall (the class is locked into the gym for the night) - one student's parent was an Academy member and they gave their screener to the school.
I think the issue is that the references are more perfunctory than revelatory - a good reference is not only funny, but gives you insight on that particular character's past or worldview. Just using references to popular things is a mark of lazy writing.
No, you're correct. It was based on real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey, daughter of actor Laurence Harvey (star of the original Manchurian Candidate).
I think Art still carries too much of a torch for Beth to hook up with another clone.
Underwritten henchpeople defined by single characteristics get murdered to clear the way for boss battles. It's gonna happen whether they're henchmen or henchwomen.
I remember first seeing him in State of Play. He has a relatively small role as a cop but he was able to color the role with unexpected softness/kindness before his exit.
That's Karreuche Tran, best known as the latest ex to get a restraining order against serial abuser Chris Brown.
It's an unfortunate consequence of time compression between book and show. In order to have everything come to a head at the same time, other events which can go merely mentioned in passing but not through a POV character's eyes in the books have to be shown onscreen.
Glad for the shoutout to "Significant Others", which was incredibly funny but unfortunately largely forgotten. It's a shame because this was one of the earlier US single-cam improv-heavy comedies (debuting only 4 months after Arrested Development) but it was ahead of its time and its audience (Bravo wasn't really…
They did - Helena took them in her escape but didn't realize they needed "food" (more liquid nitrogen to keep cold) so now they're buried in the Hendrix garden.
Sounds like the kid just wanted to get schwifty.
Looks like her highest profile roles to date are as the team boss on UPN's cyberspy show Jake 2.0 and as Lt. Laguerta's romantic and professional rival on Dexter.
I don't even know where to start to unpack this.
I can accept that the kid went there that's the only coke dealer he knows and his porn producer parents usually buy major weight.
She was also Jesse's post-rehab single mom girlfriend on Breaking Bad.
Hard to tell yet - she really only had two scenes in the pilot to show that she's more intuitive than her brash cousin (whom I doubt is long for this world).