Nooooooooope.
Nooooooooope.
When Don went to visit Adam at the hotel, I was worried Don was going to take extreme steps to make sure his secret identity never came to light. I'll admit, that secret was one of the things that got me interested in the show in the early going, and a protagonist who would kill someone who cared about him to protect…
I think he said something to Burowski in Burowski's one scene. (Hey, remember when Burowski and Collette seemed like a big deal?)
Don't forget the ample application of unearned, world-weary disdain!
Yeah, how many times did Tara say "I want to make sure the deal is what they said it was" in the past few weeks? I thought she had her lawyer confirm everything _last_ week. What was going to change?
Actually, next week will be "Inquisition"; week after that is "Moonlight." I AM FICKLE.
And yet, I'll be reviewing them separately. Twist!
"Unfortunately, someone decided to have Christian Borle made up to look like Rooster from Annie"
I'm a little of the way into the Zelda: Wind Waker remake, and enjoying it; I remember beating the game back when I had a Game Cube, but I don't remember much about the details, which makes it more fun to replay. (Although sometimes I cheat. Man, I can't even remember what it was like to play video games before the…
I'll watch both episodes on Sunday; if I think they merit individual reviews, I'll make a case to my bosses, although I can't promise anything. (And really, they've been incredibly indulgent to me already, so no blaming anyone.)
Pshaw. "How do we cheat 'em and steal?" works fine for me.
Sure, they tried (there was also the episode right before they started dating when Worf was macking on some Klingon woman, and Dax tried giving him pointers all while clearly wanting to nail him herself); my point is that they didn't try very well, and I think "Change of Heart" is proof that they could've done better.
The TNG episode makes more sense, though, because the point has broader implications. "Married couples shouldn't go on dangerous missions together" is a bit different than "the captain can't date anyone on the ship because he/she might have to risk their life at some point." The former point is obvious to an absurd…
Is that a thing? I forgot to mention it—it's a cute scene, although it doesn't really go anywhere.
Very good point—I mostly only hung out in small stores, which don't always give the best cross-section of humanity. (Also, I made friends with some folks I met back then, and I definitely wasn't the best human being in the world myself.)
Man, I love reading Heisler talkin' 'bout Magic.
The fact that Christopher freakin' Walken plays the "normal" villain is so great, though.
This is my all time favorite Batman movie, and I'm always somewhat baffled by people who say its inferior to Burton's first Batman. (On the other hand, I get why someone would prefer, say, The Dark Knight, as that's a completely different take on the material.) BR takes bigger risks, looks utterly stunning, and has…
If that's how it came across, then I fucked up; my point is that I don't buy her as "weak and confused and sort of mental." I _completely_ buy Tara's rage.
Well, I wrote about Gremlins last year: http://www.avclub.com/artic…