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klint
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The episode hinged on the 3 good guys making a lot of bizarre decisions. Namely, each assuming it was fine to enter alone.

I wouldn't call Nolan's Dark Knight series or Snyder's Man of Steel 'designed by committee'. Both were singular visions: in Nolan's case for better, in Snyder's for much, much worse.

I've been loving Hannibal season 2, but it's never gone beyond extremely well crafted shlock. And I don't think it's even trying to, so fair enough.

There have been better Random Roles, but always like the actors who are forthcoming about the practicalities of needing to work and happily discuss that side of it.

The pity is that before Oasis took over, Suede were the darlings of the media and brought with them a decidedly anti-'lad' manifesto that took delight in the transgressive. If only the journalists had had the interest to stick with that.

Hmm, not the best response to allay an accusation of pent-up rage.

It sounds like you've been wanting to say that for a really long time and just happened to find a mildly related comment on which to pounce upon.

Weiner was against the split too. AMC forced him.

He's did a ton of stuff on the activities of the CIA before Snowden. That's why Snowden went to him in the first place.

As much as the hatchet-job above may be somewhat warranted, Greenwald is one of the few high-profile investigative journalists left. We need more like him.

Sort of agreed, though I think we can allow the scene enough artistic license to assume that yes, she was just a bitch for the sake of it. Nicholson's behaviour isn't a lesson I'd apply to real life.

He was like that for a lot of his 70s movies. If you want to see him really understated, check out The Passenger.

It lost me after the second episode. I pegged it as a well-meaning failure, conscious of the Coen's stark humor but unable to convincingly imitate it. However, the reviews on here have been consistently good enough to temp me to give it another go. It at least has all the ingredients of a show I normally like. Is a

Nah. I'm enjoying him in this but they don't need a Ledger imitator for the next Joker. There are plenty more ways to play him.

If it doesn't seem out of place in a cell phone commercial, it's probably twee pop.

Damn shame. Still never met anyone who didn't like Roger Rabbit, and he gave an effortless performance in it.

I think it's safe to say Hamm is a great actor. Hell, he stole Bridesmaids in just 2 scenes.

Have executives ever cared about subordinates on this show? Cutler himself admits Lou is merely adequate but it's a power play over Roger having Lou around.

Lou's well-realized. I've met so many people like that: ostensibly polite but aggressively indifferent to anyone but themselves. He may be a 2D villain by Mad Men standards but I'm enjoying it.

I really liked the pacing of the final shot. I actually thought he was going to say 'no'.