Army brat. He was born in Northern Ireland when his dad was stationed there. His family is full on Kiwi and he grew up there.
Army brat. He was born in Northern Ireland when his dad was stationed there. His family is full on Kiwi and he grew up there.
Connery - I'll take "The Rapists" for $200
Yes, but he's Chow Yun-Fat, that goes a long way. He can act circles around most of the American actors he's shared the screen with, without uttering a word.
That's because she's bidialectic - born in America, grew up in England, then back to the U.S., then back to England and has been crossing back and forth ever since. She can turn it on and off like a switch.
And one more thought… If they have to abandon the Life Boat in 1754, is that the genesis of of the Rittenhouse Group? Do American colonists, upon realizing they've been visited by travelers from the future, form a secret society to deal with them?
You can't meet your future self by traveling to the future. By leaving the present, your taking yourself out if the timeline and thus won't be there. It's like in Well's "The Time Machine," he discovered that people in the future thought he'd just disappeared and turned up decades later.
True, but I'd guess she was writing it more as a journal than a roadmap for Flynn. And I think Wyatt was a little more sensitive than he probably should have been. The issue of his wife's death is a severely raw nerve.
He was a good guy, as far as we know…
Ten times more charming than Green Acres.
That was a good thing. Fortunately for Wyatt, though leisure suits were around they really didn't hit their stride until a couple of years later.
Lucy may well have taken the long way to the future, otherwise there wouldn't be much in the notebook.
It's more that she hasn't shared all the info about her encounters with Flynn with the rest of the team.
As I mentioned last week, I'm pretty sure Rufus is becoming vey sleep deprived.
I don't know that it helped drive the narrative forward, other than to show the that characters thinking about stuff.
That's been my understanding all along. My guess is the result of violating the show's rule is somewhere between "Timecop" and "Back to the Future."
Like the saying goes, there are only a dozen scripts - they just change up the details.
I don't know, coming from Richard Nixon it kind of made sense.
The BBC did the same thing with "Life on Mars." That show definitely had a 70s feel to it. They even recreated the BBC Globe.
Or sheltered in the Mother Ship.
Whoa!