where lil b
where lil b
Full potential is subjective, but Life is Strange came close in my opinion. Or at least as close as anyone's gotten.
You accidentally didn't put Yusuke at 1
Pretty decent album.
Great finale - possibly the best episodes this show has ever put out. Too bad the middle of the season was so weak.
It was far more satisfying to see Ramsay ripped apart by his dogs than it was to see Joffrey choke to death on his own vomit - at least for me.
Did anyone else find the "Benjen as Coldhands" reveal kind of flat? I was so excited to see it develop a bit slowly, but it's literally like five minutes after we meet him: "Hey, sup, I'm Uncle Ben!"
And we couldn't have developed her character without yet another gratuitous rape of a female character? There was no other way for Sansa to become independent than "well, guess we've got to rape her, too?"
"Sansa’s confidence in her Mole’s Town rendezvous with Littlefinger does a lot to make what happened to Sansa at Winterfell a meaningful and resonant engine for her present and future growth."
Rarely had issues with sound in prior seasons. Sad to hear if true.
Looks good. I'll probably give this a read, but only after Coates's Black Panther. Because that has to take priority.
That was probably the best line of the movie.
Steve Rogers is back as Captain America, but now sharing the title with Sam Wilson.
Opinions are a wild thing, man. It's personally one of my favorite comic book movies ever.
Right? If you live in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, etc. just head over to your local indie cinema if the Regal or AMC roster is currently lacking.
Sure, makes sense. I get where you're coming from, though. I do acknowledge the prevalence of big theaters with big movies in the superhero genre. I suppose I just don't necessarily see it as a negative since we have other films coming out, and also because these films put people in theater seats - something good for…
Do you remember if that article accounts for independent films as well? I'd be interested to know. Also, I wouldn't write off remakes as inherently unoriginal. Remakes offer the opportunity to take an old idea and transform it into something new.
The popularity of superheroes isn't causing some cataclysmic destruction of creativity and originality in film like a lot of high-perched critics would like you to believe. There are plenty of original, non-franchise films still coming out on a regular basis.