Ah, the Victorian novelist school of episode names. A lost art, in this day and age.
Ah, the Victorian novelist school of episode names. A lost art, in this day and age.
For what it's worth, Chrysta Bell isn't some random actress he pulled off the street; she and Lynch have been collaborating on various projects together since the late-90s. I get why people don't like her and I understand Lynch's reputation, but I think there was something very deliberate in her casting.
Yeah, I kind of like her as well. She's not a great actor, it's true, but I do find something oddly compelling about her. And that interrogation scene near the end was pretty great.
Did you see the penguin, though?
Star Trek: Enterprise Season 3, Episode 8, "Twilight."
Aren't stadiums with a retractable roof sort of a low-rent form of weather control?
I'm cosplaying as Denise Bryson cosplaying as Fox Mulder.
"GERMANS enter stage right
Eventually their duel will be dramatized in a movie, with Hugh Jackman playing Tarantino and Christian Bale as Nolan.
Korean Fried Chicken is the real KFC, as far as I'm concerned.
Yeah, I'll happily watch an episode of No Reservations\Parts Unknown (so long as it's an interesting one, not one where he just hangs around with a Michelin-starred chef in Las Vegas or whatever), but I generally need to keep it to small doses.
He is, but he at least tends to be a self-aware asshole, which puts him ahead of most of the pack.
Hence my steady diet of hamburgers and beer. Gotta keep the ol'… uh… head… thing… beating nice and strong.
He likely wouldn't work as a main villain, but I'd love to see Soloman Grundy show up in a movie.
To be fair, Batman: Live By Night sounds like the title to a solid graphic novel. Probably something where Nightwing is an important character.
He won't come straight out and say that he saw Bigfoot, but he can confirm that whatever it was, it had literally the biggest feet he had ever seen.
To be fair, I find both Guardians movies to suffer from the same problem. The first two acts are lots of fun, and then the final third is a bunch of BIFF-KABLOW CGI action that I find it hard to stay invested in, That's basically what I expected when I bought the ticket, though, so it's not the end of the world.
We have M&Ms in addition to Smarties. I kinda prefer M&Ms, honestly.
There is a bit set in Canada in the book. Refugees from the USA flee to the north because zombies freeze up in winter.
Huh, interesting. T&W has a number of tracks that rank quite highly in FoW's discography for me (especially "New Routine," "92 Subaru," and "Michael and Heather at the Baggage Claim"), and while I enjoy SFoH in the moment, I find it rarely sticks with me on the same level as their other albums do.