Especially since they basically sell themselves.
Especially since they basically sell themselves.
Mamie Gummer is playing Lake Bell's dad?!
She's not going to stop until she has a show with every remaining Cheers cast member, each on a different network.
No pitchforks here. It was fine. Decent summer fun, but not nearly as special as a lot of people seem to want it to be.
I…don't believe I am…no.
With a wildcard spot for Gary Cole, and maybe Ted Danson, I can get behind your list wholeheartedly. I'd leave Tituss Burgess in the field, though, because he's amazing on Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.
Surely you aren't suggesting his work was somehow funnier that William H. Macy doing the same old schtick on a show that's not even a comedy for what feels like the twelfth season?
This was more or less exactly my take on it. All the hype about how many boxes of Kleenex you'd want on hand while watching made me think it was probably just one of those emotionally manipulative ensemble dramas. Hearing how many twists it apparently had made me think it was just regular manipulative. So far, no…
Well, and for legacy performances, I think it's also important to ask if the actors are finding new layers to play over the previous seasons. For Spacey, definitely not.
The Cw: Dare to Defy (The Possibilities of Emmy Consideration)
In the first and second seasons, I tended to watch a couple at a time, and then wait several weeks before diving back in. I cannot imagine what it would be like to binge that show.
Jonathan Banks is nominated for Outstanding Wordless Scene That Only Gets Contextualized Later, one assumes.
I'm never a fan of such statements, and the first season especially is pretty depressing, but by the time everything wrapped up, it ended up being one of the most interesting and emotionally resonant shows I've seen in a long time.
Twin Peaks was too late. Legion was too…good, I guess?
I'm not normally one to get upset about award nominations, but in this era of television, with so much absolutely fantastic programming, continuing to huck noms to shows like Shameless or House of Cards seems almost criminally negligent. And it's probably time the Emmys stopped rewarding film actors merely for…
No navel. Mysterious "twin" sister. Pretty obvious we've got some sort of cloning situation going on here.
The Garfield movies aren't bad, but they rely pretty heavily on Bill Murray's charm and a lot of fairly lazy jokes.
At some point in the film, they also reference that Aunt May has been through a lot lately, implying some sort of tragedy in her life. I guess we'll have to wait for some kind of prequel to find out what happened.
Wow. That was easily my favorite film version of Spider-Man to date. It was maybe a little too breezy for the first two-thirds or so, but the moment Peter knocked on the door to pick up his prom date, there was a really fantastic shift to higher stakes and some legitimately suspenseful moments. And I thought Michael…
Then maybe don't bother coming into the comment sections for a review of one of these movies. You are not obligated to react to everything that exists. No one gives even the slightest shit about your tossed-off hatred for a movie you haven't seen.