I'm still here! I just never post because Disqus always logs me out and I'm too lazy to keep logging back in. But I'm here, watching over you all like a cinematically undereducated guardian angel.
I'm still here! I just never post because Disqus always logs me out and I'm too lazy to keep logging back in. But I'm here, watching over you all like a cinematically undereducated guardian angel.
It's one of like five shows that I've ever dropped between seasons. Glad to know it wasn't a mistake.
Oh my god thank you. I thought the show was nothing but overrated and pretentious and was going crazy at how I seemed to be the only person on the internet who didn't think it was God's Greatest Gift to Television.
Yahoo added Harmon commentary to all of season 6 today, has this seriously not been mentioned yet?
Okay, I have to ask - am I literally the ONLY person who doesn't like Mr. Robot? I can see people enjoying it as merely entertaining TV, but the constant praise of it by almost every single critic and commenter as one of the best and most sophisticated shows on TV has me fucking baffled. I don't think it's a…
I'm Hispanic and I don't have a problem with this? Sure most films about certain cultures would be more authentic helmed by someone from the same culture, but that doesn't mean they can't be done justice by an outsider. Ratatouille's director wasn't French and that movie turned out great.
I liked (but not loved) Constantine as a show, but Matt Ryan's portrayal and the sheer improbability of a cross-network-cancelled-show-crossover has me really excited for this.
This might be the closest analogy, even if it's still a bit off. Simpsons and Futurama both aired on Fox and and were created by Groening and much of the same staff, so a crossover there seems a little more natural. Constantine and Arrow are both DC properties distributed by Warner Bros, but with completely different…
Technically, Better Call Saul featuring some Breaking Bad characters qualifies, but that's obviously a very different circumstance.
I love the show, but goddamn does the animation look cheap and honestly pretty ugly. It works well for the type of show that it is and it doesn't knock any points off the show for me in the slightest, but the show is definitely far from gorgeous.
Apparently this is fanmade? In which case my question is how the fuck
I literally just now understood that Transparent is called that because it's a show about a trans parent. I don't watch the show, but I don't know how the fuck it took me over a year to notice that.
I don't think it runs the risk of dating itself any more than pretty much any animated film already does. And even if it does, I don't think it'll have a negative impact on future enjoyment of the film - Toy Story and Monsters Inc. in particular look especially dated compared to their more recent sequels, but I don't…
I enjoyed the True Detective premiere a wide margin more than any episode from season 1. I'm clearly an insane person.
I thought they were gonna reveal that that was an extended fantasy sequence or something. It was a fun bit of acting but it seemed very uncharacteristic for the show.
Nitpick, but Community had a slightly bigger budget on Yahoo than it did by the end of its run on NBC. Perceived quality of the show aside, it definitely wasn't underfunded.
And with that, I quite literally have no reason to watch NBC anymore. Funny how just a couple of years ago it was the network that I watched the most shows on. That might now be the CW, strangely.
Has UnReal even been mentioned in WOT since its premiere? I mean I'm glad it gets consistent coverage, but geez, mention it every once in a while.
I didn't care for season 1, so naturally I see myself liking season 2 better than anyone at this point.
Catching up with last night's Hannibal while eating lunch was not my brightest idea.