You must be white!
You must be white!
Beyond that, if we take race/culture out of the question, we should note that the best writing approach their "villains" as humans who are making morally/ethically bad decisions because they believe they're right.
Hey Arnold is on Amazo which held back coverage before, but I think a lot more people singed up for Prime after gettin Justified, The Americans, and Orphan Black. Maybe in a year it'll be more viable?
Isn't this just Not Without My Daughter: The TV Series?
I don't think not knowing what to do in a dungeon isn't really a problem either, unless the solution is something ridiculous, like a game-breaking or life-risking choice that makes no sense. Example: when every single bottomless pit in the game will kill you, except that one pit you HAVE to fall into to progress, with…
I do like the part where Fawful explains the tutorial to Bowser backwards, basically saying "whatever you do, DON'T press A at this exact moment to maximize damage!" I mean, it's still an annoying tutorial but at least it's an amusing approach.
Dude, I sometimes look back at the crazy gaming shit I did and wonder 1) how the hell I did that and 2) where'd I ever have the time to do it? In the case of Driver, I think I just kept playing it until I beat that part out of pure luck.
I beat it. Fuck that shit.
I'm a bit late here, but anyone know what's going on with the whiteboard in the study room? In the teaser there was some kind of question and mentioning of clues, the second clue being "Pop pop". Are they doing some kind of seasonal-long trivia thing? I just noticed it last night, and I don't have immediate access to…
I wonder if it's because, since they pretty much dropped the season-arc-plot and emphasized the partnership, a lot of that awkwardness was due to extreme editing and a few reshoots. The more I think about it, the more the show looks as if it's cutting around other disused plot threads.
Anyone want to read a crazy take on Sucker Punch? https://medium.com/24-frame…
Father of the Pride! (80% not serious. 20% kinda serious.)
Executive Decision is a guilty pleasure of mine, including the ridiculous way they manage to board the plane. It's a pretty tense, tight film after that.
Loved it. Once the standoff began, I said outloud, "This is ridiculous!" right before Neville's line, and I'm immediately sad we'll get no more coverage.
I mean, with NBC INEXPLICABLY bringing back Heroes, they might as well renew Revolution too and pair the shows up on Fridays (with Grimm). They'd fit well.
Oh, definitely. It's bad, but I liked its badness. Like, it felt like no one was giving a fuck here. And the princesses themselves won me over.
Wow, thanks. I would've swore I saw Tina Fey's on the credits. But even with their brief appearance I wished that they'd had their own spin-off film.
I may be the only one who liked Shrek 3. Well, more like tolerated.
There's a really great episode that begins season 2 where Cubbi decides to leave the Glen to become a real Gummi knight, and it's more fantastic and heartwarming than you'd ever expect a show called "Gummi Bears" to crank out.
According to the creator they were REALLY close to making the insipid show that everyone expected it to be. Then they made they show they wanted to make instead.