carlangas84
Carlangas
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Note: Che died on the way back to their home planet.

Right? And of course it was played like, "Ugh, what a fuddy-duddy!" 

IMDB just lists them as “Cheryl’s Dad” and “Cheryl’s Mom” and “Becky”.  

Serenity Forever! 

Sarah Vickers might have enjoyed squishing tomato on Jeremy Iron’s face too much.

It’s an upgrade from the amount of lines she had in Days of Future Past.

It made me realize that it was probably Sutter’s influence that led to my least favorite aspects of the otherwise great The Shield

Be real, nobody has watched an entire Zach Snyder movie. Even if you can force yourself to sit still the whole time, the eyerolling alone would cause you to miss at least 25% of it.

But where’s the love for the Flenderson Files?!

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It helps a lot that it's Patreon, so I'm not paying money to some big corporation. Throwing 5 bucks for 10 hours plus of content a month is already a good deal, but knowing its going to Griff, David and Our Finest Film Critic pushes it over the edge. The calculus would be quite different if it was part of an Apple

I listen to a lot of podcasts. I have a permanent backlog. The only one I pay for is the bonus content for Blank Check. That’s pretty much the only one I’m willing to pay for. If my other podcasts started charging, I’d listen to others.

I’ve mentioned it before, but my absolute favorite dig at the Catwoman movie came from a most unlikely source. My mother-in-law is fairly ignorant of the details of how TV/movies work (she just found out about the concept of “seasons” of TV shows in the last year), and one day when channel surfing she came upon the

One of my favorite episodes of the old Justice League cartoon (there are a lot though) is the one where everyone thinks Superman dies, and then Lobo shows up to the wake, announces he’s there to replace Superman, and then fights everyone until they’re too exhausted to argue anymore about it.

It’s great, because

Dowd, I can say without  hesitation that your coverage of this year’s Cannes was the best I read, anywhere, both in terms of critical analysis and color commentary. Thank you.

Richard Splett might be my favorite character on television. Everything he says has me howling.

I’m fairly certain most people in my theatre didn’t recognize that it was him.