halanefleur--disqus
Halanefleur
halanefleur--disqus

She did say "You will be a lot of different people in your lifetime" or something like that.

Catching his punch would still have broken his hand, though. I mean, the break comes from the impact against something hard (Superman's face, which he actually turned to reduce the impact), if he had caught the fist the impact against Sups hand would still have broken it.

Cavill's nose is slightly crooked, that gave me a hard time during Man of Steel, because I can't picture Superman with a crooked nose. Other than that, I think he's a good choice, and with the right lighting the crooked nose is not that distracting, it got better for me in BvS.

Yes, I think she likes and appreciates Clark, and she's ok with him coming for a weekend or Christmas dinner, but not with him becoming the most important person in Kara's life because that's her. As the reviewer said, it's difficult to judge Clark because single guy with a job who is also fighting evil is definitely

Jane the Vixen

Seriously? Jane's premise is what brought me in. It was crazy modern. Talk about narratives that haven't been explored.

I can't quite believe how consistently good this show is. 45 episodes of near-perfection (I remember one episode that was a little below JtV's crazy standards). Not one bad episode. It is crazy, I can't think of a single show that has achieved this level of constant quality without foregoing innovation. And JtV Does

As a Spanish person, yes, that's it. Maybe Hamlet instead of Macbeth, because it is more comedic despite the tragic touches. Macbeth is too intense.

And I really enjoyed John Carter more than any of the PoC sequels and Lone Ranger.

They are so capable of placing it in Madrid. It's not even funny.

He certainly did lots for bringing Star Wars and Star Trek closer, so he must know something about conciliation…

Marina Sirtis is voicing the computer in Star Trek Continues and doing great. I think getting one of the female actors from previous ST and letting them do the job is enough of a nod.

Vowel duration is not an important feature of Spanish (my mother tongue) and even though I've been studying English for like 20 years at this point, I still find it difficult to notice things like this "sabotage" debacle. It scares me to death, I'm sure I still mess up all of my vowels and sound completely ridiculous.
E

I find that a silly reason to berate someone. Being married doesn't suddenly make you unattractive. If he flirted with her, that'd be inappropriate, but saying that you have a crush on a actor is pretty normal stuff and quite ok, I think, even if you too are an actor.

Oh, if your point is that she only talks about first world white feminism that's true. Then again, even though there are more serious issues than getting cat-called on the street, there is room for different voices to talk about different experiences. I take issue with a lot of what she says about that particular

Jane Austen was hardly a lonely homebody, she lead the normal life for a woman in her day and age except for the marriage. She went to parties and picnics and meetings and dances. She was very much leading a privileged white woman life, albeit not the most privileged and definitely not in New York. And she certainly

Lots of famous writers write only or at least mostly about their world, even if they deal with it in different tones.
Writers that at least mostly deal with their own realities and the same topics/issues every time that come to mind without thinking too much: Emily Dickinson, Jane Austen, Sylvia Plath, Philip Roth,

The director of Once for saying it was bad to work with Keira Knightley, which took everyone by surprise because she has a reputation of being very polite and nice?

That is because even though some people doubt him at times, Bryan Fuller is precious and can't do wrong.

I'd say he is a clever, sensible, sensitive person who also happens to be quité old, and so some of his views are not particularly attuned to modern sensitivities.