In preparation for this role, Jared Leto has been emailing jpegs of used condoms to his co-stars.
In preparation for this role, Jared Leto has been emailing jpegs of used condoms to his co-stars.
Invincible, the 2006 Mark Wahlberg movie about the real-life NFL player Vince Papale, a 30-year-old substitute teacher and part-time bartender who earned a spot on the Philadelphia Eagles at a 1976 public tryout after not having played organized football since high school, I imagine.
Unfortunately Gutierrez-Reed was the armorer
I was hoping for a fatal beatdown, maybe a curb-stomping, but there’s something to be said for expediency when it comes to taking out trash like that.
Srsly. “Basic Lupine Urology” should have been the end of all Law & Order.
The last great episode of Law and Order was 11 years ago and it was on Community.
I think Abshir knew once the baby was coming Asher would be going via The Curse. That’s why he was so pushy about getting the paperwork done that day.
Safdie says there are ideas for season 2 and that there’s a lot more to explore in that world, but that it’s too early to confirm anything.
I kept thinking, “Ok, one of them’s having a really vivid, scary fucking dream...” which made sense with all the stress they’ve been through... but, nope...
I guess if someone ever gets all high and mighty about how “predictable” shows are these days, you could shut them the fuck up with *this*!!
Damn.
What the fuck did I just watch? I don’t mean that in a bad way but a genuine mind blown what the fuck. I liked basically all of Fielder’s projects but I wasn’t really feeling The Curse that much. So much of the series was just filled with cringey dread and anxiety. It moved slow and you keep waiting for it to go…
Asher made the unbelievably fucked up comment about Dougie’s wife after a night (and probably a lifetime) of constant abuse/bullying from Dougie. You can only push people so far. It finally exploded out of him when he couldn’t take it anymore.
the ending felt like the premise of a Quentin Dupieux movie
I mean there was unexplained possibly supernatural elements before then the chicken at the fire station for one.
That first part is interesting, because I also think Whitney was right when she says that Asher wouldn’t be doing anything good if it wasn’t for her. So even if Asher is sincerely putting in the effort, in some ways he is Whitney’s creation. Another friend of mine suggested Asher left the planet because he had become…
I feel like that reading does a disservice to the show. For one, we never see her completely abandon her philanthropy because she found something else to puff up her self-image. And if she did stop doing good deeds, I’m not clear on how that would undo whatever good she did. I think it also does a disservice to the…
Probably not tbh
I get why the ending is... mixed for a lot of people, to say the least, but I really dug it. I feel like the show said everything it had to say about these people at the end of the last episode: it was clear everyone was stuck in their own miserable little ruts, were incapable of learning what they needed to move…
I’m taking that as the curse Dougie put on him after Asher made that unbelievably fucked up comment about Dougie's wife. I think he even says "what have I done" when he breaks down about Asher flying away
I think the show is saying something about how the world doesn’t want people like Asher, who out of the three leads seems to be the only one who genuinely wants to be good and puts in the work to be a better person, whereas Dougie and Whitney are ultimately more concerned with appearing good than doing good.
What. The. Fuck.