Jeremy's Iron.
Jeremy's Iron.
I don't know enough about it to know if it was on Broadway, but I keep hearing local commercials for a production of Heathers on stage, which is really turning my mind into a pretzel.
I've really liked this guy ever since I read that he really loved working on Sunshine and lamented that it wasn't more successful. I liked it, Chris!
Yeah, I graduated college in '97. You can all go to hell.
Mandelbaum, Mandelbaum, Mandelbaum!
No. Just no.
Speaking of wrongheaded speculation, since they haven't explicitly told us how Ethan became a werewolf, I decided that maybe it was some sort of hereditary thing like Teen Wolf. I was half thinking that he and his father would both wolf out at the dinner table and go at it, but alas it was not to be.
I find it odd that she's humbled now, after she's resurrected a dude.
I was kind of disappointed in The World's End when I first saw it, but after repeat viewings I really love it. Something about it really grows on you. Maybe it's that there are just so many jokes crammed in.
I will always have a special soft spot for Shaun because my husband and I just randomly stumbled upon it after a hurricane blew through South Florida. We didn't have power back yet and it was hot as hell so we were so excited to find a movie theater with electricity and A/C to hide in for a couple of hours. We were…
a comment is delightful.
Meh, not for nothing, all the casting news mentioned he was only in one episode, so it wasn't really surprising that he died.
Dammit. I don't remember that. I gotta look that up. I mean I know Lady Stoneheart was basically like, murder all Freys and anyone who looks like Freys, but I didn't think it was, kill a bunch of poor people in a field.
The way they've been writing Ramsay lately, he knows and sees everything and doesn't fall for any kind of ruse. He saw through Osha based on information he got from Theon. I don't see him suddenly deciding that a letter from his escaped wife, who he tortured, would be sincere.
So, is murdering a bunch of seemingly innocent people who have absolutely no resources really the Brotherhood's M.O.? I was really confused by that and have just decided that they were just rogue deserters or something. Otherwise it makes no sense to me.
Well, I mean, not in the seventies.
I really did too. It had a really weird vibe to it that didn't feel grounded. Especially with her walking through the streets and absolutely NO ONE flinching at a wet girl bleeding her guts out.
Miss Jean Brodie!
Look, I still play WoW and I have liked Duncan Jones' other films, but from the first trailer this thing has looked…not very good. I have absolutely no expectations, but I might just wait until I can Netflix it or something.
I feel like about 80% of Frankenstein's storyline is just waiting around for him to try and lure Lily to his needle chair, and her utterly annihilating him.