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Gauephat
avclub-83a8faf1bfa2d87516f59a5a454a04cf--disqus

I feel like Mass Effect was the first game series to have me really connect with characters.  I realized this when I made a split-second decision in 3 that I instantly and deeply regretted, and eventually felt really bad about.

What did you think of Pierre?

Obviously.  But that doesn't make his treatment justified (especially in what was essentially a call for extra-judicial justice), or his wish for an apology repugnant.

Why is he wrong to ask for an apology from Lee and Sharpton?  While his situation didn't turn out as bad as Martin's, I don't see why it's unreasonable given what happened.

Why would they?

I don't know if you've seen Extras (it's an excellent show: not as good as The Office, but certainly worth watching), but you should at least youtube all the celebrity cameos.  They're really mostly unnecessary (and this is alluded to), but so incredibly funny it doesn't really matter.  The top 10 funniest scenes from

I haven't seen any of The Newsroom, but holy shit the opening credits are so terrible I'm never going near it.

The most I laughed at anything this TV season was Raylan's wonderful "You talking 'bout no sense of humour?  This is funny." prank on Boyd.

Emmy prediction: Homeland sweeps all the drama categories again.

He also has Bad AIDS.

Yeah, this is more or less confirms everything I thought about Harmon.

Somewhat of a tangent, but I suppose Neil Young is sort-of-related to this, depending on how far you're willing to stretch genre definitions: has Canada produced the greatest wealth of alt-rock of any nation in the world?  I was mulling over it the other day, and for some reason it seems to me like something the

We are Rust Never Sleeps agreeabuddies.

Do you mean "To Live is to Die"?

oooooooooooooooooooh

The alternate ending is much better.  The one they went with really does seem like it's from a different movie (or really, just the other sequels), and is definitely the worst aspect of the film.

Ooh, MI:3 is another good one.  Never understood the hate for that either, it's a ton of fun.

I think it's slightly sadder that it's really the only emotional element of the film that truly succeeds.

Is there a more underrated action film than Die Hard: With a Vengeance?  It's a fantastic film that I think unfairly gets lumped in with the rest of the awful, awful, sequels.