Totally worth it, if only so Brooks could shoehorn in the best joke of the movie at the studio cafeteria:
Totally worth it, if only so Brooks could shoehorn in the best joke of the movie at the studio cafeteria:
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OF COCK!
AT EEEEEEEASE.
I think it's the fact that William Holden's character is parachuted into a seemingly standard WWII POW film set-up that makes it so great: the movie blurs the solid lines of hero/villain, and sets out a perfect template of fallen angels/classic anti-heroes that you can see echoes of in Al Swearengen, Walter White, Vic…
VYVIAN!
Keanu Reeves again?
I think you mean Tom Hardy.
You forgot to wipe your cock on the curtains.
@avclub-8c6dcc4e048cbce98d9881c6880303e1:disqus Dr. Russell Fell from the Canberra Institute of Zombie Dynamics disagrees:
http://www.youtube.com/watc…
Two years? Surely that begs the question: "How come the sodding zombies have survived this long?" Shouldn't they all be rotted down to skeletons by now? I thought that was the basis of any credible long term zombie-apocalyse survival plan: wait it out 'til the fuckers rot. Bah.
@avclub-e57f718840a576abbb40a7d046c4e3b0:disqus Then please don't ever watch The Sixth Sense;
If only the "Mexter Dorgan Logging Co." logo had made an appearance in Dexter's epilogue, the whole thing might have been pushed so far into self-parody as to be affirmed "true genius"; instead of being just "really, really shitty" (which it was).
So like Denholm Elliott in Last Crusade?
True enough, but during the latter half of this show's distended run the comments section underneath the increasingly aghast and sardonic reviews were my absolute favorite part of the AV Club.
I done one!
I took it as maybe an interpretation of the twelve-step thing: Heisenberg is Walt's addiction. In order to vanquish it, he has to recognize a power higher than himself. Once he does that, the act in itself allows him his shot at redemption that otherwise would not have been forthcoming.
Didn't Raylan Givens say to Dewey upon their first meeting in the pilot that he put a "Dale Crowe" from Florida in prison, and Dewey confirmed that they were kin?
Hamlet both exacted his revenge and promptly died in Act V Scene II. There was vengeance (upon his uncle), absolution (for Laertes and Hamlet burying their enmity, read Walt saving Jesse and Jesse refusing to shoot Walt), there was redemption - Hamlet redeeming his inaction of the previous four hours by slaying the…
A line from Scent Of A Woman of all things popped into my head while wathcing this: "One last tour of the battlefield". There was something like the feeling of the Old King inspecting lines of troops after the war is over; after the battle has been won.
It was a forehead-slapping revelation when I discovered how well the phrase "Hey, you wanna hang out some time?" works in situations like this. If you have only spent time with this young lady as part of a larger group, rather than just being another face in her social circle you need to try and establish a…