disqusd9lih32h57--disqus
Gabriel Ratchet
disqusd9lih32h57--disqus

Or Cliff Martinez.

Hey, I was not going to Applebee's before it was cool!

His dad was also a Lynch alum (he played the Emperor in Dune).

I believe Esquire's Charlie Pierce once described him as "the dumbest mammal to serve in any legislature since Caligula's horse," which is not a very nice thing to say about ol' Incitatus.

The followup to the "I love you"s was great too: after the fade to black, you hear Ravi make a sort of horror-movie zombie "aaaargh!" noise and Liv just says, "Don't be a dick!"

A B23 ref! Nicely done.

Money, when shown, is (usually?) Canadian (Beth's stash that Sarah tries to make off with in S1, Alison and Donnie's big score, etc.

"First they came for the Nazis and I did nothing, because fuck Nazis."

Where she will no doubt outdo Ewen McGregor by playing every single character?

I guess a period of estrangement would make it marginally more plausible that grownup Catwoman has apparently never said to grownup Batman, "Hey, you kinda remind me of this weird rich kid I used to hang out with back when I was a girl."

Fair enough. My point was just that if the argument is "James Bond can never be anything but British," that ship has not just already sailed, but did so quite some time ago.

Lazenby was Australian.

Well, after all, he was a detective in the 80s, when New York was basically The Purge.

I apparently liked it well enough to give it three stars on Netflix at some point, but I couldn't tell you a damn thing about it today.

I'm shocked! Shocked! That the guy hiding behind a black comedy movie name and avatar who's laying all those sick burns on the AV Club's libtards is actually just some teenage suburban white imbecile posting from his mom's basement!

"Stop trying to make Avatar happen! It's not gonna happen!"

Avatar's still a thing?

Easy there, Sparky. You don't want to pull a muscle or something tucking in that shirt.

That's what makes the show as far as I'm concerned: it's not without its big speechifying moments — given how driven by ideology its characters are, they're all but inevitable — but they always come with a sense that on some level they're somewhat rote or slightly hollow or insincere. Where the show really shines,