backwards7--disqus
backwards7
backwards7--disqus

What a superb and unpredictable show 'Hannibal' has become. Considering that it's based on a series of books it still feels like it could go anywhere. The last time I saw a show hit its stride like this, where it feels like the creators have total confidence in their material and complete faith in their audience, was

Spiderland is what I imagine purgatory will sound like. I will happily sell my soul to Satan and consign myself to an eternity in hell to avoid hearing it again.

Some people disliked this episode, but I'm glad the Chesapeake Ripper has finally been caught and has tasted justice Seagal-style.

Not a dreadful season by any means, but a baffling one. There were odd moments along the way when I felt like I was watching a sub-par episode of Nash Bridges.

I don't know you Joel, but I'm guessing you're one of those people who think that Bunyan hasn't done anything worthwhile since 'Solomon's Temple Spiritualized'.

In 1678, when John Bunyan published 'The Pilgrim's Progress' (or to give the text its full title: 'The Pilgrim's Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come; Delivered under the Similitude of a Dream'*) it blew me and my friends away.

As a citizen of the UK, I helped to subsidise this 'F' with my taxes.

Two words: Kevin Federline

The 21 foot rule needs to be amended so that it takes into account sudden variations in altitude.

I have a theory that by the end of this season Boyd and Raylan will have been divested of the civilising influence in their lives. In Boyd's case that will be Ava; in Raylan's his role as Deputy US Marshall. It's plausible that each man will be responsible for the other losing the thing he cares about the most, which

Thematically this show is starting to remind me of the film 'Kill List'. The main similarity being the way in which the occult has seemingly permeated into the upper echelons of society. But also the way Rust and Marty seem to be on a path that they are apparently unable to deviate from no matter what choices they

I'll be kind of sad when Elvis dies. When you've had someone chained up in your basement for that long you are bound to feel their absence after they're gone.

Ray's altercation with David, and the attention that this incident will draw from law enforcement, all point towards 'Girls' becoming the hard-boiled, procedural police drama that I always knew it would be, right from the first episode.

The last time I went to hospital for an outpatient appointment, I listened while an elderly lady, who was sitting across from me in the waiting room, gave her similarly-aged friend a detailed breakdown of the plot of Street Dance 2.

'The Wright Way' - Ben Elton's swiftly-cancelled BBC sitcom about a Health and Safety Manager and his family, rekindled the debate about whether it would be better for everyone if we went back in time and uninvented television.

Hasn't offensive humour always been a part of American Dad? It's certainly one ot the main reasons why I watch the show. When I feel like I need some moral fibre in my diet I watch 'Highway For Heaven'.

This was without a doubt the greatest series finale there ever has been or ever will be. It didn't just deserve an 'A'. It deserved a new grade reserved for works of such outstanding brilliance that a single letter cannot do them justice: It deserved a 'Fucking A'.