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Captain Hygiene
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Hurry up, I need to know what I liked most this year!

Documentary

We all know Aslan's just a parallel figure for Jesus anyway - I have no interest in this vanity project of his.

My Master Chief was less of an impassive warrior and more of a bumbling idiot running around and trying desperately not to get killed. That's got to count for something in the interesting character department.

Jeff Lynne is the man. This song's good, but it made me really want some new vocal tracks.

A warm-hearted look at a man who makes his family proud by turning personal tragedy into something meaningful?

Maybe we could move Detroit to Netflix too.

The longer the trailer goes on, the more it looks like it could be the trainwreck that I've been half-expecting based on the …interesting… choices made with the villains' casting and design. Honestly, I think that would be the best possible outcome, after feeling like the previous movie was stuck in the bland No Man's

This was the year I realized that The Flophouse was not only my favorite of the (for lack a better description) informal, review-based shows, it's my favorite of all podcasts. I still love you, CBB, but The Flophouse is the most consistently enjoyable and the one I look forward to the most.

If I named my kid Sansa, it would be after my favorite mp3 player - something solid and dependable until I accidentally hurled it against the wall one too many times.

I, too, enjoyed the scene where Walt's face began merging into an amorphous lump of flesh

I've been enjoying the heck out of this series. I can't help but love even the dumber, more obvious jokes because the show's just so damn charming.

I like this movie quite a bit - it basically feels like a test run for the half of Star Trek IV that I really like.

"Dr. Grant, my dear Dr. Sattler…

That looks surprisingly good. Love the classic Space characters that pop up for a second.

This ranks very highly amongst TV shows I'd never heard of before today.

I'm looking forward to the inevitable scene where he accidentally makes four simultaneous dinner dates at the same restaurant and has to surreptitiously run back and forth between them, desperately trying to remember which nationality he's supposed to be at each one.

He broke free of the restraints and stepped forward, staggering as if his legs werent used to walking no more. Nooooooooooo, he shouted as he saw what he had become.

And those were my one real flaw with the book - it just seemed redundant to me how much Chigurgh talked about those things. The book was still fantastic, though, I just thought the movie improved it in that regard.

I'm disappointed to hear about the talkiness - I thought No Country For Old Men was a masterpiece, as much for what it didn't say as what it did. I'll be happy to give this film a shot, although what I really would've loved is for another Coen-directed film starting from McCarthy's screenplay and moving on from there.