avclub-7105f7f2eff89eb19fc9014f6baa257a--disqus
DrEmmettBrown
avclub-7105f7f2eff89eb19fc9014f6baa257a--disqus

@avclub-0ae7484a9f3bbd2a21df420050c032ae:disqus To be fair, I hate that article (and bring it up too much) not because of any fondness for Children of Men, which I'm not a huge fan of - I'm not even a huge fan of the long shots in that movie - but just the super-elitist and condescending way he wrote it.

I'm starting to regret following Breaking Bad.

Apparently Scott Aukerman, Todd Glass, and Andy Kindler were hanging out at an airport, waiting for a plane, when two kids came up to Kindler, recognizing him from Wizards of Waverly Place. Todd Glass, it seems, can't stand not to be the center of attention (he had earlier asked the woman behind the desk at the

Someone posted a clip of some moment from that spinoff, but without explaining what the show was, so I was just completely one-hundred-percent confused with what the hell had happened to Countdown in the two years I hadn't watched it.

Is this the place to talk about the story about Glass on Comedy Bing Bong that makes him sound like just the worst person?

"Friend of mine thinks it's actually May, Hammond and Clarkson, purely because Stig is an anagram of 'gits'."

Estimated time he spent on drawing Uhura's pointy boobs: too long

I love Hannibal, but it has just finished its first narrative arc and Breaking Bad's been on for half a decade now; let's let the former expand a little more before we start comparing them.

I thought it was reasonably clever, but I definitely wouldn't call it "dazzling". Or maybe I'm just eternally biased against D'Angelo for the Children of Men scenic route.

You've convinced me!

Did anyone see/have any opinions on the British original?

A movie, though.

Why is Lake Bell making that face at me in the picture? It's sorta creeping me out.

@avclub-ef7d8ff636c7f5e86f5e63b5acfd2859:disqus When Jekyll is sitting down in the chair and putting in the code for the straps, he says, "Make sure to memorize the code," and she says, "I just did." Never comes up again, completely pointless.

I love Jekyll precisely because it is impossible to imagine anything campier. For some reason all the little cul-de-sacs make me love it even more. (Why have his assistant have perfect memory and never bring it up again, for one?)

@avclub-359f449e012b58f30cbc80ea8b9e794a:disqus Just before my dander gets all the way up, are you saying that "a kind of recklessness, arrogance, impatience, a tinkerer's impulse, [and] a strong moral code" are masculine traits?

Man, we need better trolls.

@avclub-b9a25e422ba96f7572089a00b838c3f8:disqus Not gonna lie, it felt good.

@avclub-71348decaf1df2bb85be2ece24cc2a1d:disqus The Corsair was recent, though, and moreover was the only time that we've seen it explicitly happen. It seems the Doctor has worse control over his regeneration than most do, and when he turned into Smith he actually thought he was a woman at first. (Of course, he had

@avclub-c251ddeaf2bedd191d5251eb4015b8d1:disqus @avclub-b9a25e422ba96f7572089a00b838c3f8:disqus This is the most absurd nitpicking I have ever done, but when Capaldi's first episode - the Christmas show - airs, he will be 55 and 7 months, and when An Unearthly Child aired Hartnell was 55 and 10 months.