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Biochemist
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Not to be too nerdy, but no. Those who were left behind in the section carved out of the enchanted forest remained in some kind of stasis for 28 years. Cora made that clear. I only know  this because I watched all of the episodes just this summer. I also had to explain all the different aging timelines very

I'm calling shenanigans on the reviewer actually having watched the episode closely. Even my eleven year old daughter immediately got that Mulan was their to confess her love for Aurora. Everyone in this comment thread got that, as did everyone who will comment for the rest of the day. It was a major development, and

OK. I looked this up. It is fair to say these characters exist only in the realm of legend. Mulan is from an epic poem. The actions attributed to them were probably the actions of multiple real people, if they happened at all. For that matter, Dr. Frankenstein was also based on a real person, more real than Mulan,

I liked this when it came out and I still do. McGregor's terrific in it. The scene where he instantly transforms from terrified criminal out of his depths to faux rock star is a great little piece of acting.

I finally got caught up on the second season of "Once Upon a Time", and my thoughts are that I am watching too much "Once Upon a Time", and that the women in the Enchanted Forest need to cover up their boobs maybe. Also, I should get out more.

Then how exactly do you explain the Blue Fairy's cleavage or the cleavage Belle was showing when she went to meet that fire lion thing? Of all the times Belle could show cleavage, it has to be when she is going to hunt a fire lion thing? Enchanted Forest = Cleavage (unless you are Snow)

I guess I am alone in not being able to stand the Evil Queen's outfits. The only one I like is the simple grey sackcloth number she was going to wear the be executed. The stuff she wears in Storybrook is OK. Apparently I am not alone in having had my fill of Snow/Charming/Evil Queen flashbacks.

Perhaps you missed the cleavage on the Blue Fairy, and pretty much everyone else (except Snow) in the Enchanted Forest. I was wondering why EVERYONE in the Enchanted Forest had to show their boobs all the time, but my husband explained that otherwise it would not really be enchanted.

I tried that but I ended up with "Dr. Zhivago".

Is it possible to see this somehow if I don't have cable?

One of the problems I have with the show is that Robert Carlyle is just so much better than everyone else in it. It's rare when anyone else can hold their own in a scene with him.

And this is why I don't have cable.

My 11 year old daughter likes it.

Perry went along with pretending to be Doof's pet during his date.

I don't think Regular Show and Adventure Time are really made for kids. They are watchable by kids, but I think they are targeted at (some) adults.

The other one is "Scooby Doo: Mystery Incorporated", but maybe that's not actually for kids.

That was really horrible, and also I found the scene where the other boys bully Pelle into running across the thin ice really hard to watch. I just had my heart in my throat. I did not find any of these scenes gratuitous or manipulative, though.

It's so weird that everyone is focussing on that scene. How is it any worse than the scene where the foreman suffers the severe and debilitating head injury? (Hope I'm not giving anything away for someone who has need seen this 26 year old movie.) Granted, I saw the movie in the theatre 25 years ago when it came, but

Just for the record, I don't as a rule take my 11 year old to see "violent" films, but she does see some films that include acts of violence. For that matter, a lot of films specifically made for or marketed to children and tweens have acts of violence in them (Harry Potter, Hunger Games). She is also a regular

The castration scene is not graphic, and anyone would agree that this guy totally has it coming. Even he is resigned to the justice of the act by the end. This is a movie I can watch with my 11 year old daughter. It's not horrific.