I admit the reason I really liked the movie when I watched it the first time years ago was because I was a big fan of Disney's Talespin.
I admit the reason I really liked the movie when I watched it the first time years ago was because I was a big fan of Disney's Talespin.
When they told Nina her appeal was denied I didn't have time to process that before she got the bullet in the back of the head and I went "Oh shit!".
The part where Han shows Roper the "Men who don't know or care where they are" always confused me. Why does he keep them in jail cells? but it made for a great joke in the KENTUCKY FRIED MOVIE parody "Fistful of Yen"
I love the gangsters who threaten Roper on the golf course "It's the dough Roper or we gotta break something! and Roper's hot secretary.
Detective John Munch has been in a lot of shows. Instead of it all being in the same universe I'd like to think they're different realities that have a Munch in it(Except HOMICIDE and LAW & ORDER which have actually crossed over).
It's still not as jarring as Lou Grant of the Mary Tyler Moore Show going on
to be a Los Angeles newspaper editor in serious hour long drama.
It was the same with Jan Levinson-Gould on THE OFFICE(US). Originally she was the American version of the British Jennifer Taylor-Clarke, David Brent's posh boss. Jan started getting romantic with Michael and you learn that she's insane she was which Melora Hardin played beautifully. They may have taken it too far but…
The seasons with Roger Rees as Robin Colcord were my favorite of the Rebecca years. So many great plots centered around him.
It's funny because I started watching Cheers when Woody Harrelson was already been on for a year or two and it always sounds like he's singing the theme song. Even now when I watch the early episodes with Coach!
They even brought back the crazy Andy who tried to strangle Diane during a performance of Othello in a cold open in the final season.
Sam's frustration is at it looks like Gary keeps beating them was hilarious. "I give up! I give up!"
I love TDKR's structure of 4 books as separate chapters with each feel leading up to the final fight between Batman and Superman. WATCHMEN in 12 chapters is a little less straight forward with digressions and flashbacks but the mystery of who killed Comedian and what is Ozymandias' plot is what keeps the story moving…
How did Rudnitsky miss his cue in the "Spacepants" sketch? Was he in the bathroom?
The "Hardhome" episode was fantastic though.
So many old comic books I've read had water tanks on New York roofs that it would be weird not to see one.
He came off a lot better than in the story it was taken from by Garth Ennis. I also love Frank just drinking from a thermos during most of it.
I got a little disillusioned on Lee when I read WildCATS where I realized the Sports Illustrated swimsuit model women and square jawed buff male physiques don't work unless I cared about the characters. As a 12 year old though, his drawing of women in the X-Men(especially Psylocke) hit my pubescent brain like a…
I disagree. I think they made Punisher more human on this show than he's ever been in the comics and I would love to watch a show about him.
The graveyard monologue was one of the best parts of the series and Bernthal was fantastic. It was so great it makes me almost forgive the incredible coincidental twist in the mystery of the who was responsible for the gangland shootout where Frank's family got caught in the crossfire.
Warren Ellis?