Yeah, but on the plus side, she dodged a bullet.
Yeah, but on the plus side, she dodged a bullet.
Yeah, I found that moment where he decided to sacrifice himself, and his hug with Abraham, genuinely affecting. Oh well!
I've never bought that argument that Rick and his crew are monsters that are just as evil as the people they kill. Cause frankly, everyone they've killed is just a faceless minion. The show's never been very good at humanizing it's antagonists, instead portraying every person that Rick kills as viler and grosser…
The cliffhanger is annoying, but it didn't outweigh for me what I liked about the episode, mostly Rick's look of mounting panic inside the RV. I know I'm on the opposite end of popular opinion here.
Hey, at least that Overwatch thing looked kinda cool.
To be fair, they'd already filmed all these damn episodes before they knew the whole Glenn thing would backfire. Maybe they thought all those cheap cliffhangers would go over like gangbusters!
Clear motivation is in very short supply on this show, so while I knew Maggie was gonna be fine (at least until the end), I thought it made perfect sense that the characters would all risk themselves to take her to hilltop. Very unlike last week where all the characters left at the same time for extremely arbitrary…
"Negan and the "Saviors" are the same as Rick and his group, and are the "heroes" of their own story"
Well, that's bullshit. The show's always approached Rick as some kind of anti-hero, while making every other group look vile and evil.
You know what? Good episode. It won me over with it's slowly mounting tension, and I liked that the whole Maggie situation was driving the plot, pushing the characters to do something foolish. It's a miracle, everything made sense for a change! Okay, I'm gonna go read the damn review.
I've been meaning to listen to it, but I haven't really wanted to. I get the feeling that there's a lot of boring-ass "jesus" stuff in it.
I thought Sean Bean was the main character. I've only seen the first episode.
Yeah, the artificiality of that scene sort of undermines it's brutality. It's unfortunate, it could have been way more effective.
You forgot No-Talent!
Do you mean the…
*Spoiler*
Kevin Smith types basically.
It looks like it has the same problem as Spirits Within where mostly everything looks pretty good, but the faces look all wrong.
His defining trait as Batman was looking bored and lethargic. He just looked like he was half asleep through the whole thing, and he kept dozing off on the batcomputer!
I'm not that big on Linklater either, Boyhood was just ok for me. I love the Before trilogy though.
I used to hate Waking Life, and just wrote it off as pretentious, but I think a lot of those feeling were just based on personal bias because I really enjoy that movie now. Like a lot of Linklater's movies, I think I would hate those people if I met them in real life, but I can't help being absorbed by the movie's…
I, uh, teared up a little bit during Jimmy's scene with Kim in the HHM conference room. That scene was just heartbreaking.