brittanykeegan--disqus
Keeg
brittanykeegan--disqus

I've said it before and I'll say it again: McDonough's stuttered, then shouted "Medic" when he sees Toye and Guarnere are hit is one of the best line-readings ever. Every time I watch this episode it sends chills straight down my spine. It perfectly captures the disbelief and horror of what it must be like to see your

Diane Kruger on Fringe. Not only did she nail it and seemed super game for her role (cameo) but she also had one of the best Fringe-deaths ever.

I definitely think Diane Kruger deserves some credit. I just wondered how many hours of make-up she sat through just to do a cameo/hang out on set for that episode.

"The flag moves! There's no wind on the moon!" - ugh, I had to watch a two hour (TWO HOUR) documentary on why the moon landing was faked when I was in high school. Most pointless thing ever.

You know, after reading We the Living I totally get where she came from and how her opinions evolved. I don't fault her for coming out of the cluster that was the Russian Revolution and going "Let's do the opposite of that. Forever." but I just…can't handle that much negativity in my downtime reading again.

The worst place cultural dealbreakers apply, for me, are dating sites. When I have nothing to judge you by other than a photograph and the same survey everyone takes I'm going to judge the hell out of your taste in books, movies, and music. It's the only part that can feel original in a place where everyone magically

Ouch. That's a tough one. I think a lot of that depends on how well you know the person to whom you've made the recommendation. I had someone I didn't know recommend films to me at our local rental place and I did hold it against him…but I also didn't know him beyond "hey, we're in the movie store at the same time"

You just described the comic book guy from The Simpsons

I get the "they were dead the whole time" thing because that's just not paying attention. Not liking the ending is fine so long as you actually understand the sequence of events (and I don't mean "well, you just don't get it." I mean the actual timeline of events in the show).

Yeah, I pretty much jumped ship after reading We the Living. That was enough for me.

I really like his chastising Winters, especially in comparison to this episode. He's the only one who has that medical knowledge but there is a level of responsibility that everyone shares. Something as simple as how much morphine is too much makes a huge difference in survival rate.

Wicked Wilson Pickett?

I'd watch that movie.

Spotlight on Lou Rawls, y'all!

It's not that I think he's worse than he was, it's that I freaking LOVE Ed Wood and I'm sad I can't go back to the first time I saw that film.

The best thing Tarantino did was start that scene from a distant wide-angle. You get to hear the voice and listen to the content before you have the "hey, what's he doing here?" moment. By then, you're invested in the content of the scene.

Yeah, I think really good actors need strong directors. I'm wondering if what's happened to Pacino and DeNiro is that there are now generations of directors who think they can't actually treat their "great actors" as any other actors. Someone like Russell has enough of control and enough of an ego to get exactly what

I'm surprised Cusack didn't capitalize more from 1408's surprise success. I remember reviews for that film being all "OMG John Cusack!" and then it seems like nothing really happened.

"We have a rapist up in Shaker Heights…you know what? Forget that. That's my day job. I mean, don't forget it! Walk with a friend or something"

Does DeNiro count if he's done solid back-to-back appearances in David O. Russell films? Even if American Hustle was a mess it seems like Russell understands how to use DeNiro.