Me, too. Is there a release date, yet? The show usually premiered early February's.
Me, too. Is there a release date, yet? The show usually premiered early February's.
So, that's that then with Sarah Treem's three-season-plan for this, huh?
It was Mulholland Drive without lesbians.
Wasn't he in like five minutes of the movie? Yeah, yeah… I get David Bowie, but there are other, more important characters from the series that I would have liked to have seen again.
Fine. But that still begs the question: What the fuck was Lost Highway about?
ABC gets a lot of shit for reportedly forcing the writers to reveal the big murder mystery (which the creators - at least the Lynch-part of the duo - never intented to do). And rightfully so, because that did mark the beginning of the stark decline in quality that eventually led to the show's cancellation.
You're saying 'hot take' like you found a formula how to determine how great a movie actually is. You know it's all subjective, right? Which is why terms like 'overrated' are so utterly meaningless when you talk about a movie or tv show that is beloved by many but not by yourself.
I have stanima. I have a winning temper.
Did you say instead of the corrupt one?
I think that scene may have sold the show to me. Brutal and devastating and in a way also quite beautiful.
Now, now. Let's not pretend that the Globes actually matter. I agree, it's usually the most fun award show of them all (especially when Gervais or Fey/Poehler are hosting). But at the end of the day it's still just a bunch of journalists who want to hang out with rich, beautiful famous people. We all know that they…
I only read the first one, admittedly quite a while ago, but I remember it very fondly. And to the best of my knowledge it was well received, too.
Careful. HBO might sue you for using one of their many copyrighted words you stole from Game of Thrones.
I'm sure they're soon able to squeeze some new gritty take on a random Grimm story in between.
As of late, I find myself skipping directly to the comments. I hardly ever even bother to read the reviews anymore.
I know it's mostly known for its musical adaption (which was terrific in its own right) but if you're really interested in a darker and, yes, tragic take on Baum's original story then I really recommend you read Gregory Maguire's Wicked. No whore houses, no pill dropping, no 'gritty reimagening' (a term that's able to…
Episodes, such as this one, make me wonder wether they could do hour-long entries every now and then, because this is Transparent truly at its very finest: The performances were so real, powerful, affecting and the writing may have been at its strongest in the entire season.
Thanks.
I thought they covered two books per one episode. Or am I mistaken there and it is the other way around?
"But it was, if you’ll forgive the Snicket-esque wordplay, the most unfortunate victim of that post-Harry Potter trend."