bokman7757
Evan Waters
bokman7757

How is he speaking from his own point of view any more than a writer or actor?

Hope in his prime was great- a really good example of the kind of sleazy, always put-upon wisecracker (one of the comments here comparing him to Daffy Duck is pretty dead-on.)

"Let's not pretend a song that comes out of the songwriter's mouth is the same as a character on a screen or a page."

Haven't seen much of this show (basically two episodes because it follows Always Sunny) but damn Britt Lower is good.

Dee's acting reel was great. I also liked what we saw of her trying to direct non-still action, with everything horribly framed.

Yeah, I liked the "Where's my boyfriend?" bit but for the most part she didn't get a lot of personality in.

Actually I liked that Poe was basically Buck Rogers- he's the Resistance's top pilot and is played as this important hero but he's not the focus because it's not his story. That seemed to be one point where Abrams and co. weren't just referencing Star Wars but the material that inspired Star Wars.

VFX wise I think she looked fine, I didn't notice any major downgrade between her and the other digital elements, but in terms of the design I wasn't thrilled.

I'm disappointed that they seem to be dead set on visually recreating all the costumes, hairstyles, and basically some of the sets from the movie. The whole point of remakes and restagings is you can do different things! You convey the essence of the character without literally putting them in the exact same outfit!

I feel like some of her character development ended up on the cutting room floor. Nyong'o gives a good performance but you're left wanting to know a little more. (The design's also a little too basic because it was apparently a last minute redo after the first attempt was too Yoda-like.)

So I'm the only one to make a dirty observation about the plot point where it seems like Agent Carter's body is now literally defying the laws of physics?

The rule may be that if there's no body there's no death, but for maximum dramatic effect characters in superhero stories have to believe the character is dead even without such evidence.

"The mayor wants to know why crime isn't going down"

I read that as more "Hey! Over here! I'm still alive!"

They're both capable of giving good promos, I'd argue- if you look up any of Alberto's stuff on Lucha Underground, he has a fire and energy there that is simply missing on WWE.

80s Paget Brewster. Thanks, TV.

Mint?

I'd argue Sheamus and Del Rio are quite talented in terms of actually working a match. They've got lots of good workers, which is why the wrestling portions of the show are good- that they don't "matter" is because of horrible writing and booking.

Winston and Cece definitely had the best plot. They work well together.

I do like the "And also there is a girl" vibe of the picture above.