Another strong episode, but the scene where Betty calls Don might be my favorite the show has ever had. I was floored.
Another strong episode, but the scene where Betty calls Don might be my favorite the show has ever had. I was floored.
I watched it at an advanced screening and I thought that I was choosing back-row seats (it was one of those VIP theaters where you choose the seating at ticketing) to find out that I chose front row left seats. So not only was it a squeamish, disorienting film, but I saw it in the least comfortable seat in the house.
You sick fuck. But totally.
Good. Now that we've made up, you bring the popcorn and I'll bring the soda.
I watch Shark Tank so fuck you, guy.
Between his babysitter and tennis coach, Rex has never been short on "material." Yowza.
Yep, I came here to post 127 Hours. That, what, tendon? Nerve? Whatever that strand was with the screeching noise was, to date, the only movie moment that made me light-headed.
Those two things cracked me up, and this is rarely a show that gets more than a pleasant chuckle out of me.
Least applicable uncanny valley reference I've ever read.
Ted McGinley gets invited to cocktail parties? Unlikely.
I actually think Dave has been killing it this season on Happy Endings. The v-neck and Colin Hanks episodes alone have completed the transition to full-on side-splitter. (Further evidence: his Freddy sweater was one of the best visual gags I think I've ever seen.)
And it's very much in Hank's wheelhouse to come to a woman's rescue. He's such an interesting womanizer—accepting of how temporary he expects them to be but he respects them when he's present. So if there's ever an instance where I could see Hank say, "Hey, that's not how you treat a lady," I generally expect him to…
Now that would be a utopia, @a2257:disqus.
Maybe it's because I watched this high out of my mind, but something particularly repulsive revealed itself to me last night: the only real criteria Ben ever had for these women is that they be completely "vulnerable" around him, emotionally naked, despite the fact that he was about as monotoned and talky with his…
Agreed on the cliched line, but I've been witness to that line plenty of times in real life. When tragedy strikes, sometimes people lean on cliches to express their feelings because they're just such a mess at the time.
I was kind of hoping for another episode or two of Sudeikis, if for no other reason than to see Stevie squirm at being second fiddle.
No one would watch the show you're on,@avclub-d324a0cc02881779dcda44a675fdcaaa:disqus
I thought the same thing.
"Man, Neal really is just a lost inner child, huh?"
I'd hardly say that Bartleby is "unadaptable." It's just a very interesting story that wouldn't make a very interesting movie.