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Andy Pants
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Most of their comedies fucking suck, so you'd want it to not be on par with the rest of their comedies.

This is a show that has been searching for an over-arching plot or sense of purpose since it's inception. At the start it seemed like they would find something, but by now it's sunk in to me that they aren't even trying to look anymore. The primary cast will survive through plot-armor, secondary characters will die in

I was watching a youtube clip of Steve Martin on Carson back in the early 70s and was shocked to realise that he had completely grey hair even then. He was only 35 years old. I had no idea it could happen to someone that young.

Get sober?

I agree, I think boiling it down to criminal / non-criminal and good / bad is too narrow, I would describe his character as chaotic good at this point. He does what he believes is the right thing, it's just that he and society don't always agree. In the flashbacks he's neutral evil. I also think he's pretty much still

People were wearing t-shorts with the slogan back when BB was still on.

If you like the outdoors you're better off going to Australia than New Zealand, unless your idea of liking the outdoors is being fucking crazy about being out in the freezing cold surrounded hills with grass on them. New Zealand is basically Ireland, Australia has all the forests, mountains, deserts and shit.

It'll probably be set in the US, most Australian actors can play American.

If anything Beth's storyline needed another episode so we could get to know those characters who we didn't really get a clear sense of and how that hospital society actually worked which was also under-developed.

Eugene summed it up earlier. There are strong people and then there are the people that need the strong people to take care of them. Abes flashback was from a time before that dynamic developed and there were still some good people who wouldn't even consider killing someone to protect themselves a justifiable act. As

I like that they didn't reveal his motivation. We have watched enough of the show now to realise it was probably something awful. The ambiguity makes it more interesting.

I live in a very mountainous region and have considered this alot. If the zombie apocalypse ever hits, we are perfectly positioned. Most of them will get lost in the wilderness and end up strolling off cliffs. The one concern is them following the Highway from the city and running out of supplies where we are located.

It's telling that most zombie movies end when the characters finally find a safe place they can settle down. The drama comes from movement or from those places collapsing.

The film heavily borrows from 2001 a space odyssey, both book series and in particular the Kubrick film. It's just barely not a remake.

He's not as great as the hype suggests. I would describe him as solid. But I will give him one thing, he is a hell of a lot more believable as an astronaut than George fucking Clooney.

Yeah, I didn't find that relatable at all. I went to my prom (called a formal in Australia) and I regret it. The whole thing sucked the big one. Whole bunch of people I didn't really get along with or have anything in common with standing around being bored in uncomfortable suits for an interminably long time. The

The Return of Jar-Jar?

No it wouldn't. That's a more appropriate name for a making of feature.

Big guys who can actually take people down in a fight almost never do. The way they look is usually enough to defuse most situations. At least that's what I've found with the few massive dudes I've known.

It was funny listening to so many people miss the point. The Shining isn't supposed to make sense. I think Kubrick figured it would be more terrifying that way. The creepiest part of most horror movies is before they explain the mythology or motivations behind the ghosts or paranormal activity when a whole bunch of