chuckytrouseredchimp--disqus
Chucky Trousered Chimp
chuckytrouseredchimp--disqus

Martin's explained that the seasons have a magical component to them courtesy of the forces of Ice (like the White Walkers and the Children of the Forest) and Fire (Dragons, Valyria). With the exception of the WWs and the dragons by the mountains of Asshai (Bran sees them in his first vision from Book 1 while he's

Wrong: That's *Gale's* purity. Jesse's as well, if I recall "Salud" correctly. Walt advertises the purity of his meth as 99% pure, and I think Gale confirms that in the flashback of "Box Cutter" when he discusses "How pure can pure be?" with Gus.

Correction: That's Full Measure, not Half Measures where Mike does that. Badass scene.

Context: I lack it.

I'm sorry, but Crista Miller's Jordan is so monstrous she's sexy. I love her…

Huh? That picture is of the bomb from The Dark Knight Rises…

I look at Winter Soldier and see elements of a lot of 70s conspiracy thrillers. I look at The Avengers and see a great number of elements drawn from Seven Samurai. I look at the first Iron Man and see elements drawn from Theodore Roosevelt's personal history. Your argument is invalid.

No it isn't, but like The Incredibles, it's still a superhero movie.

Um, a lot of these characters have stories going back a long time, some more than 70 years. I don't think a lack of material to draw from is an issue. Sometimes, all it might take is for a great writer to look at a mediocre story arc from the comics and repurpose it to something great.

I dunno… I wouldn't call 2012's The Avengers the *start* of the "Superhero golden age". It's awfully late for that. I mean, 2011 had more comic book movies released (Super, Green Lantern, Thor, Captain America, X-Men: First Class, and of course, Dylan Dog: Day of Night…). That leaves out the Phase I Marvel movies like

These days, I come here for the riddles, not the actual reviews.

Currently, on The Simpsons: laugh and then feel empty at the Simpsons DVDs joke.

It's mine. Flynn's prose for that book is more succinct and poetic than Gone Girl's if you ask me, and unlike Dark Places, it doesn't have such an out-of-the-blue twist with a rancher (if you've read it, you know what I'm talking about) and a solution that, in terms of decision making, is a head scratcher if I ever

1) Um, no. Actors do have a great knowledge about the filmmaking process, particularly as it pertains to the Pre-Production and Production stages. They're there on set with the crew for up to 16 hours or more at a time everyday of the week working on these films and they're in Pre-Production there discussing their

It is one of the greatest films ever made. Long as hell, but in today's binge watching environment, it's kind of a breeze.

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"He laughed too hard, so I stood my ground and ejected him from his seat."

I enjoyed it, actually. I laughed at it in the theater and got a coca-cola thrown at my head. Some audience members are picky..

Great explosion, but having actually watched the film, it has among the flimsiest excuses for an explosion I've ever seen in a Bond film. A target he wasn't even aiming at just so happens to cause a chain reaction that sends an entire complex up in smoke, despite the place apparently being solar powered…

"accidentally"…?