Yea but the Wild One was 1953, that Brando's big moment. It would be like someone dressing as Gary Oldman in The Professional but acting like him in Hannibal.
Yea but the Wild One was 1953, that Brando's big moment. It would be like someone dressing as Gary Oldman in The Professional but acting like him in Hannibal.
Yea but we're not gonna talk about Judy at all.
Anyone with a passing familiarity with uber should recognize the telltale signs of nobody there knowing what the fuck they're doing.
If my mother died and I tried to use it for pity to avoid being held accountable for my massive company's mistreatment of women, union-busting, stalking Beyonce and my own entitled shittiness toward my workers then my ma would haunt me until my hair turned grey and I was broke as a pauper. Deserve got nothing to do…
Yea the news stories coming out of London about Uber making their taxis and the whole 'the knowledge' thing redundant are very depressing.
I agree a little but also think he's just really genuinely scared. He is able to recognize that this is Lucille Ball who was talking to him from inside TV the other day and Marilyn Monroe at the same time. The police have warned him he's in over his head but reality is exceeding his capacity to process it even faster…
And then Gretchen Speck-Horowitz shows up in the second episode of Hannibal!
It bums me that she is dead. I'm not sure I've ever had a more intense reaction to anything in a movie than watching her shoot heroin in Bad Lieutenant.
This deserves more up votes.
Yea, Batman can literally punch Robin in the face and have it be for his own good.
Get out of here Drew Magary!
Read 'Angels' over a couple nights visiting New Orleans last year after seeing it on David Foster Wallace's list of the five most overlooked American novels. Then after a concert an old, ugly guy randomly offered me a beer from a cooler he'd stashed in a tree stump and proceeded to tell me about how he'd banged…
I liked the kid in P3 - an orphan helping a child get perspective on her parents' divorce is a good story without any easier answers. I like Shinya in P5 too - mentoring little kids is a staple of these games, whether or not they give you guns.
'I always say, keep the oil. I said don't go in, but I said keep the oil. Had we kept the oil, you wouldn't have ISIS, because they fuel their growth with the oil.' - President Trump, October 3, 2016.
Yea that was not meant as a criticism and may be a stretch but we know that someone at Atlus had to have drawn on 'Phantom of the Paradise' as an influence. The screen splits and constant tight close-ups in the depressing high school definitely reminded me of Carrie too. Maybe 'cynical' is a bit too stern, but a…
Yea, this idea that you don't deserve Persona 5 if you're trying to evaluate it against the high standards of the other SMT games and you don't appreciate it if you don't love it enough to give up the batting cages, laundromats and bathhouses of real life for it is ridiculous.
Great soundtrack. It took me forever to find This Mortal Coil and I swallowed that record up when I did. I love the stories of Lynch blasting Rammstein at high volume on set, but my favorite use of them in a movie is prolly still Lilya 4-Ever's cranking MEIN HERZ BRENNT to earsplitting levels for the opening titles.
Play 4 and if you're not Persona-ed out by the end play 3, but with the caveat that there are some mechanics that haven't aged so well.
One of the best parts of Persona 3 was the scene where your character gets sick and has to stay in bed for a couple days. It happens at a frustrating point in the action as you're meeting new friends and solving some of the game's mysteries and if you've done a good job of avoiding getting sick in the dungeon it…
That is not even a little bit true. Clayton's review is a feather pillow, this one is straight ether: http://www.zam.com/article/…