Yeah, I'd say he came out on top.
Yeah, I'd say he came out on top.
Have you see The Raid?
If you live close to an Ikea, it can become dangerously easy to think "Huh, I could use a new 5 dollar lamp." Of course, a lot of their stuff is pure shit, but when it's so cheap, it makes it that much easier to be impulsive.
Daft Punk didn't perform? I thought that was the point of the whole Colbert thing?
I actually really disliked the main plot of Captain America and wish they had ignored all the Avengers-set up plot and focused more on the raids and shit they were doing in the war. Those two plot lines felt totally separate to me, and it seemed like the film was constantly alternating between the movie it wanted to…
Yeah, as @LurkyMcLurkerson:disqus mentions, we've had alcohol for much, much longer than we've had electricity.
In fact, in Brooklyn, it allows you to charge even more for it.
I loved that the reveal didn't necessarily alter the course of the film. I thought that, by allowing it to just ratchet up the tension, it allowed the film to have its own unique rhythm.
It really is depressing that not even fucking "June Bugs" happens anymore.
Every new thing I hear about this movie sounds like it's wants to be a movie about Superman less and less. I almost expect it to be a Batman reboot and a quasi-Man of Steel sequel instead of an actual one.
It's fine, generally, depending on the usage, but in this case, I have no idea what the original sentence means in qualifying "best" like that.
@avclub-5bc6960dad8ab0694bb4d6ff884b0c1e:disqus
@Persa:disqus The original take was "C+ but essential viewing," which made the comments just explode.
You know, the flip side to everyone hating on all the mediocre grades he gives is that it feels that much more exciting when a movie gets a good review.
@avclub-560eb60373b30a42bb1d813a47ebae5b:disqus Oh, no. I only shared because I was surprised as well.
Apparently she plagiarizes from Buffy, so that makes sense.
Probably my favorite quote/joke from Spongebob.
There's a Pynchon novel in there somewhere.
@avclub-0ae7484a9f3bbd2a21df420050c032ae:disqus You should really read Dostoyevsky, though.
Cormac McCarthy's Eventide: the existential "romance" of a vampire and his human lover. They fall in with one another and become roped into a killing spree across the American Southwest that pushes her through nightmarish landscapes of dirt and hell. One demon. One human. Two monsters.