fendjinn123
fendjinn
fendjinn123

Not only that but because of Fox News' casual disregard for factual reporting and penchant for talking head opinion sharing masquerading as journalism the platform Trump won on, which boiled down is basically that my opinion is worth the same as your facts, became normalised.

Indeed.

In fairness though, that's a nuclear reaction, not chemical. Totally different thing, y'know, morally speaking.

That guy fucks !

Crazier and crazier then that this seemingly fairly gentle period romantic dramedy somehow finds itself in the same category.

An old fisherman played by Mark Rylance no less. Yeah, 'Dunkirk' is a must see for me too. Nolan's low-key style and the fact they did a lot of it in camera (real planes, real ships etc.) could make for a great film. Cast doesn't exactly suck either.

Yeah, it would seem so. Or at least, the MPAA thinks they are.

Not to make light of your tragedy but surely this isn't so much in support of the MPAA ratings as it is clear evidence _against_ barricades ? If the National Guard hadn't erected one of those monstrosities your boy, left with nothing to be shot while charging, might still be alive today.

Crazy world when a bit of swearing and a sexy scene get a film the same rating as 'John Wick'.

An 'R' ? That's got to be a mistake, surely ? It's a 12A in the UK (so basically anyone _can_ see it but under 12s must be accompanied by an adult).

Totally disagree.

Or "your wedding day" as we call it in the UK.

Yeah, it should become apparent with another watch. Depending on which episodes you've seen so far you may only have heard a few whispered words from Kilgrave and accents don't particularly come across in whispers. Once he speaks a few full sentences in a normal tone of voice though I reckon you'll realise it's very

Sorry, not quite sure I get you ? Tennant as Kilgrave is playing an English character using an English accent (it's basically his 10th Doctor accent only, y'know, evil). Unless you mean you don't think his English accent is very good ? That's subjective of course - as a Scot living in England it sounds pretty decent

It's not that they die, it's the way it happened. Too downbeat. Sure, brave, tough, resourceful people die stupid, pointless deaths all the time in real-life. One of the reasons I watch sci-fi movies is to try to forget that fact for a couple of hours, not to have my nose rubbed in it.

Also+, pretty sure that's a promotional still i.e. not the director/DoP's choice of angle, not lit brilliantly, perhaps not colour corrected etc. since in the actual "hero" shot from the episode (this is basically the opening of the big showdown at the end of the crossover) the three flying characters are, y'know,

Maybe that but the cross-overs are also designed for people who don't watch all 4 shows to follow (though if you do you'll get more out of it of course). That said, I was actually surprised at how much of each series' ongoing story was included in the "4" part cross-over - you're lucky you follow The Flash for

Supergirl and Flash have their own separate cross-over thing going. There still aren't that many (2 major and maybe 4 or 5 minor cameo style cross-overs per season spread across around 100 hours of TV) although given the success of them, i'd imagine The CW are going to push for more, hopefully without going crazy with

Yeah, it's been/being regenerated from what I gather (got a relative that was with the police in Edinburgh) and doesn't have a lot of the issues it had even when "Trainspotting" was released, nevermind when the book was set.

Indeed. I suppose as a prominent anti-reductionist _and_ rationalist Gould was pretty keen not to have anti-reductionism lumped in with "woolley headed mysticism".