Am I the only person who couldn't care less about the case of the week plots usually (I haven't seen this week's yet, though)? For me, it's all about the family and how Michael is relating to the depending on the reality.
Am I the only person who couldn't care less about the case of the week plots usually (I haven't seen this week's yet, though)? For me, it's all about the family and how Michael is relating to the depending on the reality.
Based on the title alone, this movie should've been an abortion.
I still like Jim and Pam. I get a kick out of Jim not taking anything and anyone seriously because he knows the place is a mess and Pam is hot.
I love how gleeful Jerry is when he asks George if this is the suicide talk. It's so fucked up yet hilarious.
Sean O'Neal needs to deliver an epic twitter smackdown on this guy.
Very true. I'll have to find a new day job, I guess.
I really want a critic to one day lose their shit and rip into Kurt Sutter. How Shawn Ryan put up with him is beyond me because the things that guy says about critics is pretty fucking cruel sometimes; much crueler than anything they say about his show.
Her character in Breaking Bad is my dream girlfriend. Well, without the heroin use and stuff.
I won't argue that it's not a real downer for Raylan, and I did enjoy that plot, but I just felt it didn't make up for the underwhelming finale around it. I'm obviously in the minority on this one but that's OK.
How did he lose anymore than he already has? He already knew Arlo has no problem having him killed after the end of "Bulletville" and while I'm sure he didn't feel good about his father thinking he shot him it's not exactly a stunning revelation. Raylan's driving want for the second half of this season was getting…
I was wondering if Wynn would actually go to prison considering what Raylan did to him in there. He might get off scot free because of that.
Jere Burns is fucking amazing. Even his brief role in Breaking Bad was phenomenal.
I hate to be THAT GUY but I thought this was largely a letdown. It wasn't bad by any means but it was nowhere near the excellence of the season two finale. It was Limehouse, I think, that was part of the problem. His role in the season ended up being not nearly as important as I hoped it would which made him killing…
From what I've read both Chase and Harmon are assholes but I have to side with Chase a little here. A lot of the relationship drama in Community does tend to come across as stilted. We really don't need a Jeff speech every episode where he sums up the theme of the show. I'd take a Pierce scene over another Jeff speech…
Varys needs to survive all the books and be the last man standing.
Ben Kingsley can put in a phenomenal performance but he can also ham it up. I suspect this part will fall in the latter category.
Yeah, Draper is a sad story. It is part of what makes him a great, almost likeable, protagonist despite the fact that he's a raging dickhole most of the time.
No, that's a good point. Plus, everyone's dreams are different. I just feel like Mad Men's dreams are lacking compared to The Sopranos. Don't get me wrong, its dream sequences are miles better than anything you'd see on most other shows but I just feel like Weiner could do better.
Fever dreams are not at all like real dreams so I can excuse this one seeming not particularly dream-like. However, Mad Men in general doesn't do dreams as well as The Sopranos did which is odd as Weiner co-wrote a lot of the dream episodes. In The Sopranos little details would be off which is realistic for a dream…
That would be one hell of a twist.