Do you recall which episode that was? I managed to miss this "correction" you speak of, and that's a topic I would typically pick up on.
Do you recall which episode that was? I managed to miss this "correction" you speak of, and that's a topic I would typically pick up on.
You are not the only one; I'm watching on the same schedule that these reviews are being published.
The other kinda cool aspect about this incident was something I couldn't have known at the time, I only found out years later when I went back and looked it up: the movie was "The Shaolin Temple" and was Jet Li's first film.
I dunno, watching a movie in another language can be pretty entertaining. When I was stationed in Japan, several of us went into town and watched a Chinese kung-fu flick with Japanese side-titles. We each picked a character and improvised dialogue, we certainly cracked ourselves up.
I started wearing Levi's in high school, probably because that's what everyone else was wearing, so advertising probably played more of an indirect role there. But having owned pairs of Levi's that lasted more than 15 years, and still had life left in them when I finally couldn't fit in them, it's their durability…
I'm glad to find out I'm not the only one who hasn't watched E.T.
“You know what they call alternative medicine that's been proved to work? -Medicine.”
Third base!
Who's on first?
Actually, Monahan (or "Monahanahan", as Erlich referred to him at one point) the former attorney, is the arbiter.
I think you're thinking of Monahan, the former attorney, while I was referring to the younger, guitar-playing lawyer LaFlamme.
Shouldn't Ron LaFlamme have picked up on this before now, since the non-compete complaint was brought up early in the season?
Which was my nitpick with the movie. All the other victims were "guilty" of their respective sins. What was Paltrow guilty of?
If I had known that to be the case, I would have gotten hung up on it, too. Since I didn't know otherwise, I came to the same conclusion as @tyrannosaurus_rek
Judging from response to my comments on the previous episode, once the viewer accepts the mind-meld premise, they are not allowed to criticize any unrealistic aspect of the story. "It's a TV show, realism rarely applies."
Red Dragon has been one of my favorite books since it was originally published. I thought all of the novels since went downhill, to varying degrees. In many ways, I think Fuller has improved on the original texts, taking all the best parts and re-shaping them into an improved whole.
I completely missed the blood, though I was pretty sure from the earlier hospital bedside conversation that she was a manifestation of Will's imagination. When she says, "He wants us to find him," there's a touch of reverb on her voice and the music changes ominously. And after seeing the arterial bleeding, well,…
"Ineffectual Ken shows up at the compound with a shotgun" No, he didn't.
Very few people, male or female, would be able to do that kind of damage to a desk of any substance. While I know the prop was easily smashed, it looked like a pretty nice office, and one wouldn't usually expect the administrative assistant to an apparently important executive to be sitting behind a "shit fibreboard…
I was only pointing out that it seemed a bit unrealistic for that woman to beat that man. And even so, I enjoyed the scene; it was the first time adrenaline kicked in for me, and when I started to really engage and become excited for the possibilities of the whole mind-meld concept.