gfoyle33
GFoyle
gfoyle33

I needed to pick up a gift for my uncle this weekend and spent an hour browsing the local Barnes & Noble, which is just eons better than trying to replicate the experience on Amazon. Like at the video store, just standing in front of the wall of new releases gives the impression of unlimited possibilities.

well, if she just armed herself and her daughter, and then shot anything that moved, the problem would be solved.

White flight. How very American.

I honestly (with the exception of Shia and the obvious failed attempt to make him Ford’s successor in the franchise) don’t really see what was so bad about Crystal Skull. Yes, there was the whole “nuke the fridge” thing, but that was only slightly more absurd than plenty of other things in the franchise. Was it that

I can tell you this; both of them pale drastically in comparison to my multivolume 5000 page epic saga Busty Lesbians of Agarathor, available now at most good bookshops. (Some of them chased me away and called the police when they caught me sneaking it on the shelves, but I shall not be silenced!)

Immediately raise your hands over your head, which helps you expand your ribcage as much as possible. It really helps you to cough up/out whatever went down wrong.

I’m very curious about one thing not mentioned in the article: what happens to the smaller bits of food that you aspirate, but don’t cough up? Does it collect in your lungs over time? Do you just cough it up later? Or does it get absorbed by your lung tissue somehow?

It’s the scariest horror film I’ve ever seen. When Laura walked into the picture on her wall I was digging my nails in the cinema seat. When her father and the one-armed man argue in the car, my stress levels were through the roof. I loved it from its initial release. The scene in the club where you can’t hear what

Season 13 of Archer premieres literally the day after tomorrow and you didn’t ask him about it?!

It’s very unfair to claim the mom is the only one to blame. It’s not like this woman is a Hollywood mom taking her kid to auditions with a million other kids. She’s a single mom raising a child in rural Oregon with no exposure to the showbiz world who was offered a nice paycheck for what seemed like a silly project.

I am just enjoying the fact that my mind is savouring the whole of the series as opposed to feeling sad it’s over. I’m still thinking about it. I absolutely loved it. It was monumental. For me, it absolutely surpassed its parent series and that was clear early on. I’ve yet to watch any episode twice, but I will be

The meta-ness of the time machine thought experiment and the show actually being a time machine into Jimmy’s life - and the fact that they didn’t crack you over the head with it, feels subtly brilliant. (Or they did actually crack us over the head with it, but what a velvet hammer it was.)

Hmm... I like this, but I would quibble with one thing. I think he was perfectly willing to take the deal until he found out about Kim.

I loved how the final sequence seemed almost like an homage to the end of the 1957 noir film “Double Indemnity,” which similarly ends with two foes / lovers sharing a cigarette while the law bears down.

I think a key point is being missed when people criticize Gene’s behavior as going too far and feeling out of character. Similar to how rewatches of the whole show lead us to reassess characters like Kim, Howard, and Chuck, the reveal of what Kim told Jimmy in the phone booth leads us to reassess his motives in the

The moment they shared that cigarette felt like a great noir ending to me. Except the ‘villains’ didn’t die for their sins.

Ultimately, he’s a small-time shady lawyer from Albuquerque who no one thought would be any good, not even his own brother (for some wise reasons, of course), until Kim Wexler came around.

I loved it. I think the question this finale asks, to some extent, is what is freedom?

With a brilliant shot of a courtroom exit sign brightly lit above Saul’s head,”

What a wonderful finale to an amazing show. I think this was the happiest ending Jimmy could have gotten. One without heartache. I love that he chose a lifetime in prison, and still having a place in Kim’s heart, over a life of freedom (minus 7 years), and having no place in her life at all. I think this is one of the