I'm not squeamish, nor prudish, but I'm getting a little tired of the glee the show takes with its utter cruelty. The dog scene tonight was over the line for me.
I'm not squeamish, nor prudish, but I'm getting a little tired of the glee the show takes with its utter cruelty. The dog scene tonight was over the line for me.
I made a deal with the ghouls, shot Tenpenny in the face and took his stuff, waited until the ghouls had wiped out everyone, then killed all of them.
A very compelling argument you make.
The difference being that Bob's is consistently good and Last Man on Earth has jumped off the cliff both plot and character-wise. I can't see LMoE resonating with pretty much anyone these days.
The best thing about the Grass Sword is that while it is clearly a "cursed sword", Finn's optimism and good nature allows him to get past that and have it be a asset.
Haven't watched this one yet, but from the review it looks like it might actually have a plot and some semblance of throughline. The last few episodes have been pretty "experimental", which can occasionally be nice, but lately seems like having to listen to a lot of Jazz scatting.
Well, PLOT says he had to. And PLOT says those 300 Grounders, who were a frightening and fierce people in S1 are now totally helpless against 10 people with guns (though they had no problem against even more when they attacked the drop ship.
You know what would really have improved season 3? Not having the City of Light/A.L.i.E. plot at all. Such a booooooring time suck.
"Say, people like those Terminators. Let's put like 10 of them in the first 10 minutes of the film, so everyone can be instantly be bored".
Skynet needs to send a terminator back and kill Genisys before it happened.
And just as many who loved it. My point was that while critics savaged it, the average movie-goer was generally positive.
It's also utterly re-watchable. You can put on any episode and enjoy the crap out of it, regardless of season.
I was watching avidly over the opening weekend, lots of (non-faboys) people loved it. It made a crapton of money. The only people sour about seem to be Marvel-heads (who would never like the film regardless) and critics(same).
Find copies of "The Hits" (2 CDs and a B sides extra).
Not the time or place for this, but I was at the Lego booth at Comicon a couple of years ago. All of a sudden, 4 linebackers move in to the center of the area, Gene in the middle of them. He "held court" for about 10 minutes, the n moved on. Nothing to do with Lego, didn't stop and look at things, just wanted to be…
Here's what makes FF a great comic book, and the reason the movies have failed one after another:
Critics hated it, Twitter was overwhelmingly positive. The AV Club also hated it mostly.
Yes, making bags of money and setting up a successful franchise must be harrowing for him.
Well, that's my point isn't it. I said COMPARED TO AGE OF ULTRON.
The Vision was the biggest flaw in AoU. Shoehorned in, confusing, rushed, pointless, unnecessary. If he had his own giant battle scene at the end that went on 10minutes longer that it should have, and left everyone bored, he'd be AoU itself.