*OBLIGATORY BEST OF THE SEASON THREAD*
*OBLIGATORY BEST OF THE SEASON THREAD*
Uh,
SPAGETT!
Also, if we're gonna branch out here into television, I think I could make a good case for pretty much every scene with the 456 in Torchwood: Children of Earth as some of the most intense, scary things I've ever seen on television.
SPOILERS
Also, and maybe it's just because I re-watched that particular scene just a few hours ago, but the birthday party in Signs. Which, when you stop and think about it, what happens isn't terrifying itself, but the entire setup is just… incredibly unsettling.
I think we can all agree the dog blowjob scene, which was actually an entire subplot from the book, was the scariest scene in the movie, purely on the fact that it literally comes out of nowhere. I saw the Shining when I was 10, and though it is one of my favorite movies, it's one of the few scens that's truly vividly…
YES. Psycho is an excellent movie, but its reputation as a horror film is… misplaced. Yet that scene managed to scare the shit out of me, and the entire group of people I was with. Fucking terrifying
The Thing is the only movie to scare me in a very, very long time, which for a badass no holds barred lawyer such as myself, says alot. I literally jumped when that scene happened, and the ensuing head crabbiness only unsettled me more.
I love how it's becoming a recurring gag at this point, but Randy yelling still manages to be one of the easiest jokes this show can go to for a quick laugh.
Read his Detective run and thought it was okay- it was good, but I certainly wasn't blown away by it like everyone else was. Definetly gonna have to go back and re-read it one of these days.
As much as I loved it, upon further thinking, I can't help but wonder at what point was the switch made b/w the Doctor and the Tesselator, and how was the Tesselator able to mimic the Doctor's time properties?
Does it really need to? Is the time-wimeyness of it really hampering your enjoyment of the show to such a degree that you absolutely Must have a rigid sense of time in a show about time travelers?
I was just about to say, this should be an hour long scripted drama on HBO, not a documentary on Discovery.
I've been raised on R.E.M. from birth- literally, my parents would play "Radio Song" to get me to stop crying when I was an infant, and it apparently worked every time. As a child of the 90's, I haven't felt this old, or sad, since Toy Story 3 came out… thanks for a great run, Stipe, Mills, Buck and Berry.
As much as I loved the "Subway" portion, all we got was three measly paragraphs on "Pamela"? That was the first time since Jurassic Bark a show reduced me to tears, so needless to say, I was really excited for that part of the interview. Meh.
I have nothing to add, other than Louie Season 2 may just be my single favorite season of television ever, so I'm Really looking forward to this.
Great episode, but was anyone distracted as hell by BBC America's speeding up of the show? Quite nearly killed the atmosphere, for me at least.
Seeing as Zack asked, as a fan of this show, this was a good episode, not great. YJ generally tends to be really good as far as simplistic action shows go, with enough overarching plots and character development to keep things interesting. Showrunner Greg Weisman has a reputation for quality cartoons, and it shows.
YOUNG JUSTICE, at least in respect to the DCU, takes place on Earth 16. It's a completely seperate continuity from any other DC-related property out there, so no prior knowledge is needed.