brittanykeegan--disqus
Keeg
brittanykeegan--disqus

So, Faust House has to be Slytherin, right? I mean, there's no other option.

Hey, man, I tried my best to end that nonsense. You think it's bad from the outside. It's terrible from the inside.

I think that's part of Twain's genius and the brilliant part of Huck Finn: Here's this character that at least half of Twain's audience doesn't even acknowledge as human (Jim) and Twain makes him such a beloved character that when Sawyer plays his trick on Jim you immediately hate Sawyer for playing with a man's life

Yeah, Peter Pan is one of those stories that doesn't need a faithful adaptation since it's written to the cultural standards of the time. Tiger Lily is a pretty racist character, Tinker Bell keeps trying to kill Wendy out of womanly jealousy, and Wendy returns to neverland once a year to do Pan's spring cleaning.

I always imagine Peter Pan to be a little bit like Tom Sawyer. Sure, he seems fun and exciting but then he'll suddenly be a dick for no real reason (i.e. Sawyer not telling Jim he's free and Pan feeding Hook's hand to the crocodile).

Yeah there have been really big, pivotal moments in all three films that I feel like weren't translated from the book correctly (Katniss drugging Peeta in book one, Katniss asking Peeta to stay with her in movie two…sadly repeated in movie three). Finnick's monologue was a huge one. It's supposed to be this big,

I get what you're saying about Hunger Games. Everyone I saw the film with agrees with the sentiment. It was a long film but I liked that the film addressed so much of the book while adding wider details, i.e. how this one handled the spread of the revolution in other districts. The thing I would change is that I

RE: Hunger Games - I agree with you view about Gale. I spent most of the time he spent speaking mentally willing him to shut up. I don't know if it's Liam Hemsworth or the part. I know about halfway through the film I mentally recast Hemsworth with a couple of different people. That being said, there have been moments

Just thinking: you know who would be great in that Anthony Perkins' role today - Ty Burrell.

Raging Bull is one of those films that I'm glad I saw and I admire the hell out of, but I never want to watch again. I ended up hated everyone in that film.

Monsters Inc. is such a great film and, I think, under valued when compared to the other Disney-Pixar films.

I agree with your assessment of the Hunger Games. I am a fan of the Hunger Games books but until this movie I hadn't been as thrilled with the films. Visually, this film had some great moments (SPOILERS: the attacks in the other districts, the evacuation to the shelter in 13). I was also pleasantly surprised by Josh

Prisoners. Very specifically, the last scene makes the movie for me.

How is The 100? I've only started to pay attention to ads for it in the past couple of weeks.

So that whole time on the island Oliver never washed his clothes in a lake or anything? He can't take his new Chinese clothes, hand wash them and air dry them? He's being held captive. He's got time on his hands.

At least it's not H.I.V. …E.

I did not trade all of my adult credit in liking "Olicity" just for them to not be together for the dumbest reason of all time. If the show didn't want to go down the road with them as a couple they really shouldn't have bothered at this point. Now it's just eating up episode time that could be focused on important

The Ladder is secretly Ra's Al Ghul.

I liked that there was one random scene of Felicity in the Arrow cave wearing the $10 million necklace like it was nothing. Especially since earlier in the evening Ray had to have a moment of "oh, sure, you can wear that insanely expensive necklace around for the rest of the night. Whatever. It's not like Starling

I thought he was saying this is a bad copy of Supernatural's first season, not that Supernatural's first season was sub-par. Sleepy Hallow has borrowed a few things from that show that have made me start giving it a little bit of side-eye at times.