Excellent handle match for the two of you!
Excellent handle match for the two of you!
I would have agreed with you one or two years ago. However, I'm under the impression that lately, Quora questions have superseded the Yahoo! Answers ones. Those tend to be much more informative.
——- The "Well, that was really good" episodes ——-
13. The Waldo Moment (even though, in hindsight, it was fucking visionary with regards to this election cycle)
12. Hated in the Nation
11. Men Against Fire
10. Playtest
9. The Entire History of You
8. Nosedive
I too, miss Fringe so much. Glad I wasn't the only to think of it.
Twelve months later, on a Blu-Ray bonus: "After thoroughly consulting with George on the Star Wars Universe and what makes it what it is, we understood that the essence of the saga lies in altering the movies the audience knows and loves on a regular basis. But we wanted to bring it a step further. So with Rogue One,…
So, that definitely makes sense. Thank you!
Just for nitpicking: was anyone else bothered by the fact that the term "Red wedding" is used in-story (by Walder Frey)? I believe it hasn't before in the show.
Thank you so much, I was starting to think I was alone in taking CinemaSins as nothing more than idiosyncratic, self-referential banter. Some - rare - times, the inconsistencies pointed out are actually insightful, but really, 99% of sins are plain jokes.
Thanks, but I need to work on my sarcasm, I was just referring to the missing R there …
A leaning experience? Definitely, most sex is, but what's your point?
Hahaha, didn't even cross my mind that it could be heard that way. I guess this is just my idea of what could most probably come out of Uncle Pete's mouth.
Characterization is quick because Mickey is basically fucked-up Britta.
For a show that's been defined as dense on content and acting, and thin on cinematography and editing, I really liked the cut to a wider shot of Uncle Pete and Pete standing alone in the bar when the former said "Cum is rare in life. It's really rare". It had this mix of humour and poetry to it, that resonated well…
I was pondering on the lingering closing shot as well. Could be. I guess we'll now next week, but I honestly have no idea if it happening or not happening is more likely.
This. Also, I have to disagree on the boring part, compared to other mid 20th films it has aged extremely well. Mainly because the narrative and visual techniques were so modern at the time, and have been integrated into mainstream films for the following decades.
I suppose he saw Joseph Gordon-Levitt making Don Jon and figured "Hey, I could do some version of that trick!"?
I agree that this second episode might have been less structured and layered than the first; also, the humor was just a teensy bit broader. But I also have to say that this got me hooked for good on the show: last week I was appreciating the quiet, play-like setting and the thematic cohesion of the whole thing - and…
Oh hi existentialism.
I agree. I find it funny, though, how this persona he's created for himself on stage and in Louie is that of someone who's incapable of doing anything proper or articulate in life, when in real life, given his insane creative output rate, I can't imagine him being any less than a workhorse with such a focused artistic…
"Sure, I know a lot of Earthlings. I know a lot of Earthlings, some of them very nice people."