avclub-f4b6f6d657d5e53b7fe60bf94595b0c9--disqus
Trins_xxx
avclub-f4b6f6d657d5e53b7fe60bf94595b0c9--disqus

I don't know; some of the points have long story arcs, like Bad Wolf was felt from the first season to the fourth. And who knows? Maybe beyond, if Billie Piper is invited for another episode?

Others may say that the companions after X, Y, Z sucked… I have to admit that I stopped watching part way through Matt Smith's first series, because I really, REALLY disliked Amy Pond initially (a cheaper, chavvier version of Martha) until my boyfriend convinced me that she grew less annoying later on. But that's par

Well…with all due respect, it is a British show and the primary audience is British. It's like saying us stupid British people don't know X, Y, Z about these American shows. (It happens a lot for me; if I'm interested enough, I just look it up on the internet, with information fairly readily found).

What show was this? All three was superb actors!

I don't know if the viewers have seen the first three series but the ultimate christmas special (in my opinion) was The Runaway Bride. Catherine Tate was absolutely superb has a hilarious, ridiculous, LOUD Donna and The Doctor's devastation and borderline self-destruction was so wonderfully, poignantly executed that

Any chance you could review the first three series of the new Doctor Who please? I'd love to read what you think of the first three series and Rose (episode and character) especially.

I believe Hugh Laurie was in it too… Laurie and Fry have long been friends since their Blackadder days and Jeeves and Wooster (another British comedy classic!).

I was ready with Community and any (every) Paintball episode until I just put on the first episode of new Doctor Who and HOLY shit I forgot how ridiculously gripping and brilliant it was. So for me, it would have to be Doctor Who - either the first series first episode - Rose, or the second series two-part finale

There's a reason all of the voting went to the Communist Party, until the Nazi's usurped it. And in direct comparison, how about the British during the second world war? That was essentially a strong, central leader.

This is the first time I've been able to relate to any of the Shannons. I fully sympathise and empathise with her disgust at the pustular thing! (I can't even touch Acne - one very good reason I won't be a dermatologist in the future!) And I even sympathised with the gauged arm - for an intro into medicine, that was

Eli Gold singing what a girl wants? Pure gold in terms of entertainment.

Something that's relatively mainstream but underappreciated, I'd also like to mention Sailor Moon. The first two seasons, shown in USA and UK both, are sort of bog-standard. Unfortunately, it's from Season 3 onwards that things get a little more mature and interesting and that's unfortunately when USA and UK decided

I think Ballad of Fallen Angels was something akin to the actual start of the show, as opposed to the prior sessions, which essentially worked as intro's for various characters.

I think it's more than just that, though. I think the method of storytelling is very mature; very much a show instead of tell, which appeals to many people, including me. Additionally, at the root of it all is a tragic love story (whether you consider it to be Spike and Julia or Spike and Faye); that instantly

The music is outstanding in Cowboy Bebop. Escaflowne is worth watching once too, but I have to admit that I find it lacking when compared to Cowboy Bebop. But then again, I am a die-hard fan of CB.

I saw this show ages ago and it's what made me a fanatic. I forgot just how little dialogue there is and how much the music and casual scenes tell the story! In my opinion, this anime is quite literally a work of art, something others can only aspire to.

I thought this was actually much, MUCH better than Once Upon A Time. I found Once Upon A Time predictable and clichéd. Jennifer Morrison was cringe-worthy as always and the whole thing felt like nothing more than a run-of-the-mill adaptation of a Disney Classic (as opposed to the original writings of the Grimm

I have thought, for a long time now, that Christine Baransky's Diane Lockhart should be the star of the show. She has a certain degree of maturity and sophistication that Alicia's character can't aim at. She has continued to be an ice queen - rather than the affair with Will warming her up, it has made her seem more

That actually sounds pretty good, if executed well. Doctor Who has had an episode, maybe two, like this one and it was pretty damn well executed (SPOILERS: The fact that the person in the alternate reality, Donna, had to kill herself to save that and the real world was pretty damn impressive).

The medicine/science was awful in this episode. Why exactly would a common cold have a cure to a pathogenic virus? It's like saying the cure for HIV is to be found in the common cold. (I'm fairly sure some scientist or doctor would have stumbled onto that by now!)