google-b84953955ecaeb37e49561f042577c43--disqus
Jared Chambers
google-b84953955ecaeb37e49561f042577c43--disqus

I think the issue is the thesis of the work gets lost in the translation.

The problem is the whole thing isn't in his head. Bateman clearly did kill/attack some people in the book (taxi drivers, homeless people, hookers) and is recognized by his victims peers (the taxi driver is a good example, +1 to @avclub-4c56756898d633b36107f305da70351d:disqus), which stands in contrast to Bateman's

Be more accurate to say Chalky for that one haha

I occasionally do some ground work.

@avclub-f073cd45cff903b9a6e8a810ecda129b:disqus It is from no country, but a by-gone era that we are, somehow, fast approaching and, yet, have never left.

It's like something out of a translation of Derrida.

Oh fuck off.

@avclub-e7be8d8e2b9e28afea9bd38a675cd65b:disqus So their white halves make a Neal Brennan?

But they're bi-racial.

Another whitewashing of history. Everyone knows Lincoln hunted Blackulas!

The Hangover worked because of Zach Galifianakis.

@avclub-587b11d4d193d217aa603d0b4d34d95f:disqus No, it's more like the limited serial run is an integral aspect of Watchmen that distinguishes it from ongoing superhero series like Spider-Man. It goes against the canon to add new, official additions to the work.

Yeah, there is nothing vague about the Christ-figure imagery in GranTorino's conclusion at all. Course, I don't think that detracts from the movie, and I like how they explicity foreshadowed it with the newspaper horoscope scene.

Watchmen is a critique of the super-hero and the very notion of an idealized super-power, hence why the characters are all just comic archetypes in what is essentially a cold war morality play. People still care about Watchmen 25 years later because of that underlying thesis (even if they don't realize it) is where

These are totally unnecessary and will likely lack the ethos and thesis of the original series, but I'm going to contribute to the problem and buy these and probably enjoy them, much like an obese manatee of a human that is lost in a sea of Cherry Garcia pints and self-loathing as they ask themselves, "Where did

I GET WET.

John C. Reilly

Not sure about any slams of 30 Rock or Community, but CK has expressed some dislike of the cliched, saccharine writing that crops up in sitcoms and the lack of a proper live audience.

You're also going to be attending Penissbender? What a coincidence!