For pure entertainment value and getting the most out of a concept—and taking itself seriously and not seriously simultaneously—SG1 is one of the best sci-fi things we've ever had.
For pure entertainment value and getting the most out of a concept—and taking itself seriously and not seriously simultaneously—SG1 is one of the best sci-fi things we've ever had.
Requisite I care.
The Linkin Park song that comes to mind with regard to this guy is "Waiting for the End." It spoke to me strongly at a particular moment in my life, and his range was what I always found myself thinking of, next to the lyrics.
That's not Eric Bana and Greg Kinnear in the header?
I think that that approach has led to some unsatisfying films (e.g. Man of Steel) and certainly the trainwreck that was Fantastic Four (although Chronicle was a better film by the same director) but many of the worst have gone off-course for other reasons, Green Lantern, X-Men Apocalypse, TASM 2 all being undermined…
Wonder Woman and Amazing Spider-Man 2? I'd say the first Amazing Spider-Man, maybe.
I don't know if there's a better example of a film in which the good out weighs the bad—for me—than Interstellar.
Hello, Bizarro-me.
My take on this is that I like Nolan's filmography and I don't feel compelled to rank it, much less get into arguments over it.
Sea levels are rising even faster than we expected them to.
I'd go for that.
*starts thinking about ice cream*
"The Georgian equivalent of airbrushing."
It may not happen for another 3 billion years, but eventually Disney will buy Disney from Disney, and the universe will collapse in on itself into a singularity with no other light left to pull in.
There's a definite pattern to these things. Shock at the change, followed by snap assumptions that the artist was screwed, usually concluded by a gradual acceptance that it was for the best in the long run (exceptions notwithstanding).
It's like the Great Yoda Schism all over again!
Times is a flat Square.
I'm just like "Write good Muppets stories, please."
Vice Dallas: Howard
It seems that there are (or one can assume, there must be) tons of live recordings of all kinds of bands that are just sitting in someone's vault or closet, gathering dust.