I saw Queen with Lambert last year, and it was amazing!
I saw Queen with Lambert last year, and it was amazing!
Oh I won't spoil it if you haven't seen Chapter 32 yet…
I won't spoil it for you if you're not up to episode six (chapter 32) yet. But enjoy.
I would watch the Six Feet Under, Dexter, Breaking Bad, Angel, Game of Thrones, Buffy, and Hannibal episodes all again. I also found 'The Mountain and the Viper' a lot harder to watch as far as GoT goes.
I thought she said to Frank that she wasn't hungry, and then got herself some eggs, after doing that egg choosing crap earlier. I thought it was a bit of a rejection of her role as the First Lady.
Didn't he practice with his security guard in the back yard?
And they had the Ice Truck Killer in this season's House of Cards! Mind blown. All they need now is a Michael C Hall cameo.
It's about him keeping control over is alcohol consumption and rationalising his relapse as medicine. It's a stepping stone.
RIP Parks and Recreation
Just saying what we all thought I guess. I still enjoyed it, but it really had nothing on D9.
The only other finale I can think of that handled the characters futures so tastefully was "Six Feet Under". Beautiful.
I had literally never heard of this woman. She sounds self-important.
That particular comment is definitely 'problematic' as you say, but shit these guys are melodramatic. Way to sensationalise nothing. Selma was a great story, but the movie wasn't really anything special. And seriously, did everybody forget 12 Years a Slave won last year?
Did anyone else think that the first person's comment about Selma not being a good movie wasn't really racist, and that the av club are sort of overreacting to these fairly inoffensive if not bizarre comments from academy members? No, just me? Alright then.
Well, way to make your predictions convoluted as f**k.
Well I don't really like the Tolkien/Martin comparison anyway. I love both, but ASOIAF is definitely more character based than plot based in comparison, so I really don't think that Martin ever intended his series to be the most tightly plotted series around. Maybe if Tolkien had the forethought to say "Gee, I think…
Well, let's do some simple math. Tolkien spent twelve years writing LOTR, at a rate of 139 pages per year for a total of 1664 pages.
They're not really comparable. Sherlock is a mini-series, Elementary is obviously longer run and susceptible to binge-watching. I personally find Elementary quite formulaic, with too many "filler" episodes, but I also don't mind a lower standard when I am watching a lot of episodes at a time. In summary, both are…
Good one.
I enjoyed TWD a lot more this season but it still didn't crack my list.