Let's hope he hasn't crossed the Thin Red Line.
Let's hope he hasn't crossed the Thin Red Line.
No one trapped in a bunker with Claire Danes is safe.
He's probably hangin' with Eddie Furlong.
Yeah it has to have the whole team including Brick or I'm walking.
God bless PT for having the guts to shoot a new 65mm film! It's been nearly two decades since the last all-large format example.
I mean, I know her truncated role this season has been attributed to her pregnancy (BTW, there's a hilarious article speculating on the baby's daddy…there's like half a dozen possibles…the gal gets around), but I really am beginning to suspect she's being slowly phased out, because Weiner et al have begun to see the…
I'm very pleased with how this season wound up. I swear it's as if the writers have been reading these forum posts. Kudos to them!
rubs a vial of cancer/aids into open wound.
Where is Mark David Chapman when you need him?
Crossing my fingers for an office killing spree. Tobey was always quiet and withdrawn…
I imagine next season will be more Nellie-centric, and when she's not around, everyone will ask, "Where's Nellie?"
So I think we can agree that all the people involved in the making of Tim Burton's movies really need interventions.
Jesus fucking Christ this show's really gonna suck next fall.
Burton REALLY needs an intervention to wean him off his Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter addiction.
I'm sure Dish will find some perfectly suitable non-union Mexican equivalents for all those AMC shows…
The character really feels focus grouped, rather than written. I get the sense they're reacting episode by episode.
"Okay, Nellie's not testing sympathetically enough with the 19-39 demo. Write a scene that makes her sympathetic."
I get the sense they've got no fucking idea where this is all going, and they're…
Seeing this ep, after watching Revenge last night, I could see a clear contrast in how two utterly reprehensible characters are handled in ways to attempt to humanize them, and one succeeds while the other fails miserably.
Maybe I'm reading too much into it, or maybe it's because his themes are
rather universal, but I'm noticing (and liking) the increasingly
Shakespearean tone of "Revenge," of alliances and familial ties and
people you can see headed for the cliff, and they're all just willingly
going with it.
Well with the renewal Dunham et. al will be able to make good on her promise, and add some, er, color to the proceedings.
NBC's method of self-sabotage is making it increasingly the Travis Bickle of networks, always ruining things for itself by taking dates to porno theaters, then lashing out at them at work. All the while the network execs mutter, "Someday a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets."