doctor-boo2
Doctor Boo
doctor-boo2

I wanted to argue this point but I guess the highs are so good they make me forget how many "forgettable" films he has. There's Steve Jobs and Macbeth and and 12 Yeas a Slave and Frank and Shame (and I'd stick Prometheus in there, due to his performance being fantastic - and it's not like people have forgotten about

He at least seems fond of his theme for Rey - he joked at one point that he'd be returning for Episode VIII because he didn't want anyone else scoring her. And I'd back him on that - his Rey theme was a great piece of music (at its best in her introduction scene and her journey home).

Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home.

Pick (a hot looking passenger)
Read (all about her and her background/aims/personality to shape your conversation and convince her of a connection)
Awaken (from hypersleep. Play dumb about it happening but make it clear she can't go back so there's no time wasted before she accepts her only choices)
Transform (into not

And the tagline!

Just mind your john, son.

And Matchstick Men is great fun!

"Get off my Vice President's plane!", surely?

It's not out until October! October!!!

FUCK YES.

"It is a period of civil war. Rebel spaceships, striking from a hidden base, have won their first victory against the evil Galactic Empire.

"If only the Jedi would return!"

"You wouldn't like me to go full throttle"

I guess Han's Solo Movie (which is why I'm not part of Disney's marketing department) will be the one that tests that. But it has the benefit of a lot of distractions (Han! Lando! Chewie! The Falcon!) to ease the transition.

I like that they've appeared in all seven films so far and Edwards was faced with the decision of whether or not he'd be the one to break that… then fuck it, he can just about justify squeezing them in so now it's Lord and Miller's dilemma.

I really felt for the rebels in that scene - the inevitability of their deaths, the panic, the fear, the heroism of the rebel giving up trying to get through the door and instead handing the plans over. It really was brutal.

One of the best best Christmas movies at that.

Well, technically it was nominated (and won) an Oscar this year.

Kiefer Sutherland playing it completely straight was the highlight for me, especially his arc of being pregnant and subsequently losing the baby.

There's a BBC series currently in the works. Rumoured to have a 40 episode, five season commitment to doing the whole trilogy. Jack Thorne is currently working on the adaptation.