avclub-c9be0674ead9b2448c14d31c64f2b01b--disqus
fineoakstructure
avclub-c9be0674ead9b2448c14d31c64f2b01b--disqus

@avclub-e3f5ab7f02122f95b801e13e2c586d6a:disqus Oh, I agree absolutely. 

I got to see this a few weeks ago at a documentary film festival.  It's kind of hard to be depressed, because Hetherington genuinely comes across through so much of the film as a uniquely happy guy.  As the review points out, this documentary seems to show that he really seemed connect with a lot of the soldiers,

I have a few friends and acquaintances who are schoolteachers (younger ones, mostly in their late 20s/early 30s), and, almost across the board, I appreciate their heart and drive for teaching much more than their scholarly aptitude for it.

No Roy Blount, Jr. love?

The true measure of a man's worth.

Sophisticated?  Not the Howdy Doodats.

Wad ado

@avclub-749a8e6c231831ef7756db230b4359c8:disqus It was pretty early.  Second episode, I think - maybe even the first?

Having watched Chungking Express again recently for the first time in a number of years, my previously mild preference for the first story exaggerated itself incrementally.

BMO is generally regarded as ridiculous by F+J, based on a long history of BMO acting ridiculously.

Oh Jesus fucking Christ. What is it with nerds and always wanting fucking back stories?  Damn it, this is why I mostly stopped reading these reviews a while back, because of all the dork-gasms over the mostly mediocre back story episodes.

I agree with you to a point.  That is, I agree with you that vocal tempo is very important to voice acting, but the fact that you're sticking it to a particular episode or two of this show is kind of funny.

Yes, it was La Cucaracha, adapted for car-horn.  And I laughed, too.

@avclub-620982009915db2a0b4a49e224bad30c:disqus I defer to your superior palate because you can differentiate between a grease-soaked cardboard box and Domino's Pizza.

I like to think you ate the boxes, not the pizza.

The AV Club is high as a kite, everybody!  Goofballs!

(I actually sat around for 15 mins trying to modify that well-known dialogue fitted to tomato paste and sodium benzoate, but then, serendipitously, "The Gambler" came on my iTunes playlist, and I realized what I had to do.)

THE INTERNET IS NOW OVER.  THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME.

The end of history?  Did we really think that, @avclub-60396f24057a26c5e19fc6b7dd5227a4:disqus …or should I say FRANCIS FUKUYAMA?!

In the commentary, one of said duo (I want to say Weinstein?) openly admits to Chalmers being his favorite character and the somewhat embarrassing lengths his fandom has gone to (i.e. doll ownership).