Bingo!
Bingo!
Ha, ha.
FYI: Abel's played by twins, and they've also been on Mad Men (he wrote for the third week in a row). Seasoned pros.
But what about Mr. Cyr?!?
That Ruby is heinous.
"…there’s a conspicuous lack of anxiety about serial car bombings, one of which nearly kills the potential successor to the presidency."
Except in this case critics may be loving it, but not necessarily audiences. A lot of angry people left the theater after the screening I attended. I didn't hate it so passionately, but it was a disappointment.
She's one of the best things in it.
Not quite fiction when the main characters and locations have the exact same names as the actual people who were involved in this true crime story as well as the Olympics.
I think A.A.'s review is right on the money. The movie is sadly airless with a perpetual atmosphere of foreboding and lots of capital-A acting. The three central performances are potent, but Ruffalo is the only one who manages to breathe real life into his character. I had high expectations and was very disappointed.…
1) ABC keeps Michael Urie in the fashion business, from Ugly Betty to Modern Family.
Funniest episode so far in terms of laughs-per-minute. And I really enjoy Andre's boss and co-workers. Great timing and writing.
I know lots of people exactly like that, it was very close to home. It's only because she's filtered through Allison that she even seems a little over the top. She may be obnoxious, but she's also on point a lot of the time, especially if one is at all into alternative healing practices.
The inconsistencies with the detective could also be because, like the flashbacks, we may be seeing each of their points-of-view of the interviews. After all, they do occur within the "Part One/Part Two" framework, and not outside of them in a Part Three.
Not over-friendly, but a pushy business owner trying to get an edge (possibly for financial support, definitely for sociopolitical clout) with the wealthy, famous novelist living in town via the son-in-law. This show likes to hit the class warfare and town politics notes.
But not before she sings "Don't Rain on My Parade."
This managed to be the most ridiculous and most compelling episode of the entire series. You could say that it started with "another fucking montage"—but this was actually the first Fucking montage. The Venus scenes and the last sequence really didn't belong in this train wreck to hell, they were that good.
"Kiss your refund goodbye."
Eugene and Abraham, as portrayed on the show (including in this episode), just do nothing for me. Never have.
The Killing.