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I Will Probably Forget This Qu
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I think the "alphabetizing" would have been enough to be able to find things (or any singular consistent order, really, as long as it's applied to the whole collection).

True, but I believe End's point was in response to Miller hypothetically buying a car too new to have a built-in CD player.

Somehow, she took the lesson as "I do not deserve love" when the obvious lesson is "If you don't want to have sex with a teenage boy, don't pressure him too hard to tell you why he is breaking up with you, because he probably will."

Why would that belong in a review of a film?

I will always try to point out typos that make the point better than the correct spelling would've.

I don't think it was ever right for him. Alice in Wonderland has always been presented as a very bright fantasy, where the dark elements creep in gradually. When I first heard about Burton adapting it, I thought it was off because he would go too dark and gothy. So I was as surprised as you that he went wrong in

150 years / 6 billion years = MODERN.

I react to things like this in the opposite way of the headline; to me, the impressive thing is that, with all of the people speculating for the last 20 years, some of them spending a significant amount of time digging into the most obscure passages of the test, the best theory that they could come up with was "Hodor

I would bet that George R R Martin had "Hold the door" in mind way way waaaaay before he ever knew what door, or even where it was. [In fact, if you think about it knowing that they had to get the door in somewhere, you suddenly say, "Hmmm… why does that tree have a door, anyway? That's pretty weird."]

Apparently, you have no experience with people in war zones or search-and-rescue operations.

It was coherent inasmuch as it never bothered to try to explain why people did things, they just had them say "I'm going to do this!" and then they do it.

By the time "First Class" came out, everybody knew that she was going to be Katniss.

"You can't get more obfuscated than that."

They were never all that good with women. John Byrne gets big credit for making Sue Storm The Invisible "Woman", instead of "Girl", but meanwhile he's also the guy who had her think things like "Boy, it's a good thing that Reed had the idea for me to train so that I could develop my powers in order to (do thing that

I don't think we'd be seeing much of Mystique if they hadn't accidentally signed one of the biggest movie stars on the planet to the part.

So your argument is, it's not enough to make everybody safe for right now, if a plan doesn't make everybody safe forever, it's not worth doing?

"Deadpool" is going to the template for a Gambit movie, just you watch.

"The school get blown in the middle of the movie, and they didn't have time to create their suit."

I was curious about this, so I googled "Marvel excalibur movie rights" — apparently, of all people, Warner Brothers have the rights.

The second Wolverine was actually, in itself, a nice counter-point to the crazy CGI blockbusters. It was pretty low-key and relatively small-scale, and I enjoyed seeing a comic book movie that wasn't about saving the entire world.