avclub-e6de69552960e2a2af8c824b52374b0e--disqus
Edgewise
avclub-e6de69552960e2a2af8c824b52374b0e--disqus

I've seen it again more recently, and you're right. Fisk was bleeding a little after Murdock put up token resistance to the vigorous face-bouncing he received.

OK, so I don't keep up quite as much with consoles, but I thought their digital services were comparable these days. At least that's what my console friends tell me.

as mallets do

Yeah, I don't get the tone of this newswire. A very unfocused kind of sarcasm that seems like it's making a point, without ever reaching it. This is like half-assed off-brand O'Neal.

My dear friend, what's wrong with Steam? I'm just surprised that it hasn't been mentioned in this discussion.

Holy fuck, that was so strangely beautiful.

I don't know, man.

That excuse is sitcom-bad.

There's a place for her at HuffPo.

I thought the lip touch may have been due to a slight bruise from Matt's block.

That's pretty noble and brave how you stick up for millenials with your doubt. Of course, you could just go google the damn thing I'm talking about, but that might get in the way of your plan for saving millenials from that one guy in a forum talking shit about them. Listen to yourself. "Maginalized"? Who is

Why the question mark? What are you, some kind of wishy-washy uptalking millenial? Have some courage in your convictions/sarcasm!

My favorite are the stories of newly minted college graduates who bring their parents along to interviews. Then the parent will call the would-be employer on a regular basis to push for a decision, like they are talking to a guidance councilor or some shit. It just pisses me off to know that this is happening.

I remember seeing this as a kid, and not being able to get it out of my head for weeks. It all came flooding back in Kill Bill 2.

I had a different interpretation of THINK than Dan and most readers. I didn't think that THINK was worried about the consequences of being accused; I thought he was worried about re-traumatizing his wife. I re-read it a couple of times, and that still feels like the right interpretation to me, but I can see room to

I'm with you, but I'd swap out "Comet" for "Be Wherever You Are."

It's weird how you decided to interpret this.

Wasn't the Magnificent Seven Samurai a kind of high-quality remake in the first place?

Eh, I'm not down with Felicity's rejection of Oliver. I mean, all of a sudden she can walk, and the first thing she does is walk out of the room? That's ice cold. His behavior seemed very understandable in this situation, and she didn't have one ounce of sympathy. I don't think the writers meant for it to come off

"…almost any given episode of Homeland is better than any given Taken movie."