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PolarBears
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I watched John Wick (B+) and Snowpiercer (A-) recently. Wow, it looks like exciting, original action movies can still be made these days. The former had incredible world-building, Keanu Reeves ass-kicking, that nightclub scene, and a very cute dog. The latter started out with a unique concept, then somehow got even

I'm so happy that the show realized again just how good Saul-Carrie is. Mandy Patinkin finally got something to work with this season, and he knocked it out of the park, as expected. That entire climactic sequence was really wonderfully handled, and Homeland's got a great spy thriller momentum going here.

RIP Glen A. Larson, without whom this review would not be possible.
Battlestar Galactica, Season 3…
EPISODE 17-"MAELSTROM"

The more important thing here is that Steve Carell never won an Emmy for The Office, and that is very wrong.

You should know that some people think it's cool to throw buckets of fake blood on you as you are walking out of Burlington Coat Factory.

Goggins has been the "god of FX" since 2002, as Shane Vendrell. Give him any role and he'll knock it out of the park. Have him start crying, and even the most callous of people will feel something.

Regal in Lincolnshire, 7 pm Friday.

No A+ list is complete without The Shield's "Possible Kill Screen" and Friday Night Lights's "The Son".

You guys may have missed it, but Brody wasn't the only one Carrie hallucinated in this episode. That bug on the floor of her jail cell was Chris.

"I'm a Jew."
"Yeah…well."

I like Chastain too much to notice any flaws in her performance in this movie, but you could be right.

SPOILERS

INTERSTELLAR
“Love is the one thing that transcends time and space.”

Also, I thought all three Murph actresses did a good job of making them seem like the same person. Jessica Chastain, as expected, was wonderful.

Great points. I saw Mann and Cooper as foils, and I really liked how the movie explored selfishness/selflessness and how they connected to survival instinct on a personal and species-in-general level. These ideas also connect to what Brand did and his justification for doing so.

Anyone else think Plan B succeeded and "they" are the people who survived?

His death scene was a "Holy shit" moment for me, not because I thought he was going to make it out and head off to Elysium or whatever, but rather because of the stylistic choices there. The use of silence was fantastic, really adding to the impact of the scene, and that was of course followed up by the entire docking

Dazed and Confused, too, just that this time, it's "They get older, I stay the same age".

The main thing I took away from this was not "reskinned wizard shit", but rather the "billions of stars and planets and things never experienced before". I feel like the wonder of experience, of exploration, was the main point of the film, and while it may not have worked for some, I bought it. Sure, Nolan wanted to

Agreed, and I absolutely loved the way the movie transitioned from the Earth scenes to the spaceship scenes, with the countdown over the image of Cooper driving away from his house.