avclub-a279a7e8621cff22258a361babf69a4b--disqus
elib206
avclub-a279a7e8621cff22258a361babf69a4b--disqus

I saw this movie at SIFF a few weeks ago. I really loved it, and I think it's as much a human documentary as it is an investigative one. I think it's incredible how Farrier and Reeve keep to the (admittedly long) trail leading to [REDACTED] while telling smaller, more human stories about the people affected by and

What's so sad about this is Mike Epps left the underrated Survivor's Remorse to do this show. We'll see what Survivor's Remorse does with his absence, but he played a big part in that show's first two seasons.

That's great! I had no idea.

I can't wait for more of this show. I assume it'll get a second season, since it seems to have gotten a warm reception, and has Apatow behind it.

I'm part of the burger brigade myself, but by all means follow your own path.

Claudia O'Doherty has been so great on this show. She's seriously stolen every scene she's been in. I really hope this show gets her more roles. I would love to see more of her.

That's because he was straight out of Nathan for You. He was in the second season episode where Nathan uses a lie detector on a mechanic to guarantee fair estimates. I recognized him immediately.

Some games are cool when they do that (Spec Ops: The Line, for example). Some games *cough* Hotline Miami *cough* take so much pride in their violent systems and then after an action sequence are just like, "wow, you're a real piece of shit, huh?" It's totally hypocritical and not in a charming way. Also, there was

Man I did not like Mad Max. I had high hopes for it, and stuck with it for a while. The game itself is beautiful, and the universe is fun to live in, but that fades quickly with repetitive gameplay, and clunky leveling system. It's a game that had so much potential, but became horribly boring for me.

That's just Justin Theroux having a lot of tattoos. Although I totally think it could fit into an earlier part of his life.

also he was on six feet under and was in a grave this episode sooo?

At first, I would be disappointed by this episode. I thought it was going to be some heavy-handed Lindelof fantasy episode, and in a way it was, but it was so funny and compelling, I was happy to sit back and enjoy the ride. The only thing I'm worried about is how this affects the universe of the leftovers. Until now,

It's really cool to see the birthday boys pop up in here. Their show was a sort of spiritual successor to mr. show in a way.

Sure, but Master of None is focusing on pieces of a relationship that other shows don't focus on. We don't see Dev and Rachel go through some "will you move in with me?" episode because that's been done so many times before. Their chemistry is strong enough that opening an episode with Rachel moving in just seems

this was my favorite episode of the series. I love how, despite being rom-com-esque, it didn't fall into ridiculous territory. For example, when Dev makes the pasta and shows Rachel, she's pleased and impressed, but it doesn't blow her mind. The pasta-maker wasn't some symbol for their relationship gathering dust, it

Loved that opening bit of Dev and Arnold, and then Diana walking home. The music set to Arnold and Dev was the whistling from Don't Worry Be Happy, and Diana's music was the theme from Halloween.

Damn. Was hoping for a premiere date on Atlanta. Really want to see Donald Glover back on tv.

the moment where the scientist on the phone started to talk about Azrael was so perfectly depressing, hilarious, and relieving at once. God I love what this show does with the fringes of society.

Just finished this episode. I really really like this show so far. As someone who has worked with young kids, it was kind of nice to see that manic and illogical side of the kids revealed, but not abused. Really excited to see the rest of this show

Not as strong as the premiere but still an episode I liked.
Anyone else notice that when Kevin got in the car as Lily was crying it was almost shot-for-shot like the opening of the series premiere, when the woman's baby disappeared?
Also, maybe i'm the last to catch on to this, but Margaret Qualley, who plays Jill, is