It's a law for a reason. Just let the officer do his job.
It's a law for a reason. Just let the officer do his job.
Ohhhhh HELL yeah!
"They let you take your drugs into jail? So incompetent."
There were a couple cuts to scared-looking onlookers (who weren't killed) who I assumed were guests spectating the carnage. I don't think the scene was intended to be a misdirect - the narrative director explained earlier he had set this up.
You might be right, though I read it as showing that these are standard questions/concerns they have for the androids at he park. And it made the final shot of her killing the fly that much more ominous.
Not a fan of lampshading puns either
Yea, I often think that South Park's messages are more nuanced than they're usually interpreted. It can both be true that Gerald is behaving in a disgusting manner (seems obvious to me) and that people place too much importance on their social media presence (same).
Well, that's my problem. I don't feel like there was much, if any, evolution for Elliot this season.
I don't think they're mutually exclusive. You can have a compelling atmosphere and creative stylistic choices while still moving plot forward and developing your characters (see, e.g., Rectify).
What a frustrating end to a frustrating season. The show has some brilliant performances, fascinating scenes and characters, legitimately interesting and thoughtful themes. But right now, it all adds up to less than the sum of its parts, because there's so little focus on the /actual story/. This season honestly…
I'm not an SJW (I don't think), but by the end of the season PC Principal was not a villain and the show invited you to sympathize with him.
"The announcer saying, 'You’d have to be an absolute asshole to not stand and support it [Abrams’ revised national anthem]' while the camera focused on Colin Kaepernick. Not only was that a weirdly direct attack on Kaepernick and his protests, but it also felt like a weird, personal stance that Parker and Stone took…
I might have been reading too much into things, but I thought one of the kids had called their father earlier, and Dr. Brown was trying to make sure they didn't see him that day. Could be off base though.
Same. Marge on the Lam is an absolutely hilarious episode, a great stealth Wiggums AND Hutz episode on top of being a genuinely affecting Marge episode.
Wow extremely rude to Ruth Powers.
Maybe not the best place to leave this comment but the moment this season when I realized how great Chandler's performance was is the confrontation with Diana when she first pieces it together.
"They write characters as horrible as the Always Sunny crew, but then set them loose in a cinematically rendered dramatic world, left to clang up against "real" people."
Pretty much on the same page as you. This show and the second season of You're the Worst have the two best depictions of depression in fiction I've ever seen.
On the bright side, now Big Head knows that the pool is better left at its original location.
Ugh, of course it was the Knicks. Obviously I need to rewatch.