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conor c.
avclub-ffadfee9fe0afff81e56ad361473dc64--disqus

It is a pet peeve of mine that people think Morrison was a "great poet" (he was fucking not). But his genuinely moody lyrics were backed by a fucking awesome band, and they're one of those rock bands who created a real world around their music-I will say though that their first and last albums are their only truly

"I once saw my mom knock my dad unconscious with a frying pan. You know what I did? Kept right on going with my birthday party!" Any allusions to Cox's incredibly fucked up childhood are hilariously dark.

Not a bad episode, but yeah the premise is surprisingly under developed-there could be something really tragic in Bruce finding happiness thanks to a villain and then losing it, like "Perchance to Dream"; the psychological undertones of the plot here should have been fodder for a two parter. The plant hybrids are

There's this moment around the climax where McGinley's face just freaks out as he has to kill a Viet Cong soldier (he's in a foxhole, basically, and he opens fire) that's stuck with me. Probably because of the way it was directed but its intense.

thank you for the Manchurian Candidate nod.

I agree that might have been a misstep if Fuller just wanted Lecter as a sinister supporting player at first rather than making clear his true nature.

This doesn't look like a bad movie (nice review), but I'm just gonna open up a thread to talk about how unexpectedly awesome Minority Report was. As much as it conformed to certain story beats, it was uncompromising, well acted, extremely dark, and visually creative. Thoughts?

That whole scene is amazing; just when you think the guy will calm down and accept his loss, BAM. "I curse your production!"

Parts of that production are excellent, but the actors playing the Edmund/Gloucester/Edgar triumvirate just aren't that good, which makes the play dip a little in quality. I'd like to see a Patrick Stewart King Lear sometime soon.

Never seen this, but the 2002 remake is actually really, really good. I haven't seen it in years, but Clooney is amazing in it.

All short, and mean, and-and, not Ted's friends.

holy fuck, they were not kidding.

Alison Brie could totally carry the weird combination of cheerful peppiness and total insanity.

Oh yeah, I remember that-they always used laser guns-which made the show especially lame compared to BTAS' badass submachine guns

Such a good episode (and the original comic has awesome, pulpy Timm artwork as well). The best joke is when Harley reads the newspaper, horrified by her puddin's being all alone out there, and the headline reads: JOKER ESCAPES, BODY COUNT RISES. Also, the Joker is an idiot for not wanting to rev up his Harley (then

what happened?

The moment when he tries to pass the joint to one of them, gets confused, turns back and forth, and goes back to smoking it is perfect stoner acting.

Its funny because Dancy was also in Adam, a movie that centered around his autistic character (didn't see it). I'm not sure I'd like it, however.

I was convinced by the pilot review on here to check this show out, and I'm glad I did. It's atmospheric, beautiful to look at, and I hope it can build a decent universe of its own.

Apparently, people don't love this movie, but I'm still going to see it. The Tree of Life was so powerful and intense when I watched it that the entire audience, as the credits rolled, walked out of the theater in total fucking silence, including me and my grandmother (yes, I saw it with my grandma, she was into it).