That glass scene put the episode over the top.
That glass scene put the episode over the top.
That's cute, but it's 10 times funnier if you stop reading after "it".
Doll induced trauma is the perfect excuse to break up when he and Amy inevitably bone down.
Whenever they start getting sick, they stop getting sick and get awesome instead. Rosa is Barney's sister.
I like Connelly, but I barely remember the female leads for any of those movies. They were all 'fun', for lack of a better term - everyone involved seemed fully committed to the silly, shtickyness of it all. Treat Williams and Billy Zane are underrated and underused, but so terrific in The Phantom. And Campbell,…
I unironically love The Rocketeer, The Shadow, and The Phantom.
That's the kind of thing that really hammers home the reality of the situation. It's an exciting movie, but no movie can do justice to what they lived through, or died for.
Donald Pleasance was terrifically pleasant in The Great Escape.
Niki Yang is my favorite voice actor on the show, so I'm glad she's at least voicing BMO frequently. I haven't seen much since the beginning of season 5, though.
The Flame Princess episodes have all been pretty satisfying. I wish I had something more profound to say than that, but the show packs so much emotional depth into so many of it's characters that, while her story lines would be the best part of another show, here they're just part of the package.
Grey vest, or tank top? Either way is good, but I'm still Team Rosa - pretty sure it's the hair and the scar on her right eyebrow.
We even let them post reviews of terrible TV shows.
Yeah - there are a lot of stories about fathers being angry at kids because the mother died during childbirth, and it makes sense because childbirth is usually riskier for the mother than the father (duh!). So, this is a different take on that trope.
Yeah. I don't know what to say. I spend enough time with assholes IRL that I can't find ASIP funny. I had the same problem with the original The Office, too. But the cast is all pretty talented, and they're funny people. I loved Day in Pacific Rim.
I hadn't heard about this, but I'm interested almost as much because, for a change, it's the mother blaming the kid for the death of the father during/due to childbirth, as anything else. I can't think of any other movie that has tried that angle.
The AV Club
I like Day, but can't stand Always Sunny. Actually, I like most of the Always Sunny cast, but still hate the show. So I hope that other stuff they're involved in is successful. But I can't muster any enthusiasm for this at all. It's one of those things that I'll add to my Netflix queue but never watch.
Beatriz consistently has the best reaction shots of any main cast member. She's believable - funny without being a ham about it.
As long as they're not doing an early 20th century minstrel show, they should be okay.
I liked Fourvel's initial podcast appearance, but that gave the character room to develop. He's kind of a one-trick pony, though, and once everyone knows how unhinged he actually is, it doesn't work anymore, so his second appearance wasn't very good. And he's terrible on the TV show, where he's got to burn through…