eraserheadpencildick--disqus
EraserheadPencildick
eraserheadpencildick--disqus

Psh, "Star Trek: The Next Generation"! The music! The planets! The Picard!

Oh, sweet Jesus, I scrolled down here planning to drop the truth with "Obviously 'Star Trek: The Next Generation,' you fools!" but then you reminded me about "Twin Peaks." What an opening. What music. What a show.

You hit the nail on the head so hard here that it…went into the wall? Of my metaphor? Or something?

Gesundschrumpfen.

For me, it was the recent release of "The Wind Rises." Ebert adored and respected Miyazaki (his Great Movies essay for "My Neighbor Totoro" is one of the greats), but he also still had the wherewithal to call Miyazaki out on his shit (here's looking at you, "Howl's Moving Castle"), so I was so interested in what

This took me, like, 10 seconds to get, and now I can't stop laughing.

Charles will be back next week in newly written flashbacks, so he and Margulies have at least a few scenes left.

I assume the bailiff had to've been the first to die because otherwise he would've restrained Hunter Parrish after a shot or two.

I'm sort of assuming that we're not done with Hunter Parrish yet. I assumed when the episode began that he was innocent but was going to get convicted for some reason or another; now I assume that he's innocent of the murder of Dani Littlejohn, but he's kind of screwed himself with the mass shooting. Anyway, I'm

"The Good Wife" is shot in NY.

I think about the show's endgame from time to time, and it always occurs to me that I can just as easily see Peter back in prison or running for the vice presidency in the series finale.

Oh, fuck me, that was long.

I could not possibly agree with you more.

It's so weird for me to think that the crossover audience between "Animorphs" and "Goosebumps" wasn't huge. Both of those series were a big part of my childhood.

Unsure if that's an "Indiana Jones" reference or a "Warehouse 13" reference…but I'm sure Saul Rubinek is perfectly genial!

For the last few major deaths, my girlfriend and I have made a tradition of watching a particularly elegiac film in memorial: "A Prairie Home Companion" for Robert Altman, "Venus" for Peter O'Toole, etc. For Hoffman, I wanted to watch "Synecdoche, New York," and my girlfriend said it'd be too tough on her. We

A self-loathing, anti-male man, obviously. (Whatever the hell that means.)

Maybe HipsterDBag?

Me, too.  How else will I know whether Dikachu has said something cleverer than Scrawler, or whether the third, wittier reply was even more appreciated?  This has damned the lurkers even more than the real commenters.

I don't think anyone has been able to tolerate a Milos Foreman joint since the '80s.