I figured Megan Fox would fit in well because I trust this show and most people involved by now. Her reading of the “smush pain that feels like everything came out of the sandwich” line was pretty great.
I figured Megan Fox would fit in well because I trust this show and most people involved by now. Her reading of the “smush pain that feels like everything came out of the sandwich” line was pretty great.
This was probably my least favorite episode in a long time, which is frustrating because there are still parts I really liked. The scene of Fiona looking around the house one last time and, surprisingly, much of Frank's story in this episode showed that Shameless is still capable of being a great show, but there was…
I figured that from the first episode she appeared.
Agreed.
Is "dragging down" a racing pun?
Sounds like David Sedaris's Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk.
Was just reminded of the Orphan Black garbage disposal scene. Love it.
As stupid as the Yanis storyline was this season, I have to admit I laughed a lot at his death.
Yeah, it's fascinating that the screenwriter is the author of the original book. If it'd been a different writer, I would've said, "Wow, he totally missed the original author's point."
It was mostly disappointing because the ending of the book was so unsentimental and subverted expectations, but the movie played right into those same expectations and went super sentimental.
I was thinking earlier about who this show could kill off - there's gotta be a big death coming at some point, right? But I'm not sure who. I reeeeally don't want Petra or Michael to die.
Wow, this felt like a S1 episode, with Frank actually in the mix (being a huge dick, of course) and Lip and Ian having a plot line together.
Hmm, there's a lot I like about this show on paper, but I'm really just not laughing very much. I think the only time I actually laughed in this episode was when Gene yelled, "Look in the mirror." It's like there's a good rhythm to the jokes that reminds me of Broad City or something, but the jokes themselves just…
Looks like another botched adaptation of a pretty decent YA book. Todd VanDerWerff wrote a cool article about it back when it came out: http://www.avclub.com/artic…
I agree, I really liked the goodbye song, but just looking back at the character, he changed into so many different characters over the course of the show.
Yes! So many people liked Locke, but even in the early seasons I found him super annoying and wanted him to be proven wrong just because of how smug he was about it.
Oh boy, Andy Bernard is probably one of the most inconsistent personalities I've ever seen on screen, starting with his funny love-to-hate S3 "big tuna" persona to his gradually becoming likable as he and Dwight fought over Angela and reaching his peak in S7 with "Andy's Play," one of my favorite late-season Office…
Interesting. I really disliked Britta in S1 when she was just a drag and entirely humorless, but as the show went on she became my second favorite character after Troy. She was a highlight in the past few (weaker) seasons.
Yeah, that one wasn't great. I wouldn't put it as low as those because I still laughed frequently enough, but it was definitely lower-tier Sunny.
Not an amazing episode, but still a lot of great parts. That whole scene with Drisko slowly revealing himself to be a creepy fucker to Mac, Dee, and Charlie was so prime, especially Mac's reactions as he strained to understand how it could be a prank.