Damn, I wanted to believe he was the one Walter killed in his basement in season 1.
Damn, I wanted to believe he was the one Walter killed in his basement in season 1.
Thing is, as an audience member, being led by the omniscient storyteller, we should actually know just wtf is really going on—at least most of the time. Especially by the final act of the final episode.
They don't talk back? That's weird.
Bernie might have lost the popular vote but would've won the Electoral vote.
That's an awesome scene. I'm putting it in my Indie Script.
How about ignorant and stupid then?
Nothing short of World War Three will cut through the noise.
No, no, no it's going to be China, so you can relax.
Yeah, but the theme of sentient (or sapient) A.I. was still pretty fresh when those films were released, whereas now they seem pretty old-hat, if you will.
I'd like to see them actually learning English in a classroom, rather than just be programmed with it.
Well, the show was moderately engrossing and technically polished but didn't really introduce any ideas or themes that weren't already covered in Blade Runner, or even 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Westeros?
Exit Music (for a mind bending Sc-Fi Epic). Wonder what percentage of the audience recognized the Radiohead songs.
When will future humans learn to make the robots weaker, NOT stronger then they are?
Pretty quiet comment area here, which is just as well because this malodorous, overcooked, humorless heap of parrot droppings deserves to be forgotten by all. Would it have killed the actors to have at least cracked a smiled one fucking time? (I'm looking at you Sean Penn!)
Where's Hot Pie when you need him?
Sound alone would be quite effective in this scene. Then the victor opens the door, allowing the light to reveal the loser.
God, I hope someone really articulate, like Henry Rollins, does a Hatesong on "Ironic". I would love to read that—plus all the comments. (Please, FSM, make that happen.)
A Geddy Lee fan hate's Michael Stipe's voice? What's that about? Also, Kate Pierson can do no wrong—not even on this wretched song.
"This will not stand, man." — The Dude, Sept 11, 2001