harpo87
Harpo87
harpo87

My favorite role of his is still a Danish film called Adam’s Apples. I highly recommend it if you can find it.

Fellow New Jersey native here. That’s true, but the stereotypical north Jersey accent is pretty distinct from the various NYC accents, particularly in not being non-rhotic. But yeah, I spent the first 25 years of my life in NJ (including going to a state college), and I still get a lot of “you don’t sound like you’re

Concert: sing along. It’s encouraged, unless it’s intended to be a specially quiet, intimate song (and even you can, as long as it’s not making it hard for others to hear the singer).

I agree, but I also don’t mind this approach. There are limited stories to tell for the character in the time between the existing season and his appearance in Rebels, and quite a few years to tell them before Ewan gets too old to play the part. If it lies fallow for 3-5 years while they develop a really good story,

When the Disney lawyers opposing you are the good guys in the story, you know you done fucked up.

I’d argue Clone Wars was better on the Jedi side, especially when Ahsoka was involved. Which of course makes me more optimistic for this.

No “A Streetcar Named Marge”? Boy, I really hope someone got fired for that blunder.

Yeah, pretty much. I’m all for the goal of more diversity, and he’s right that Latin people are often left out of the diversity conversation and are underrepresented in films. This particular one seems like an ill-conceived hill to die on, though,

Putting aside that you’re responding to a week-old comment (which seems... odd), maybe try reading a book sometime? (I’d recommend “by the sword” by Richard Cohen, just as a start.) Sword durability depends greatly on the metallurgy. First of all, they’re almost always made of steel, not just “strong metal,” unless

To be fair, there was a second episode of Doctor Who that brought his character back, and it was pleasant enough. That’s about it for me, though.

So maybe now she can be the next guest host for the Daily Show? (Honestly, I was surprised her name didn’t come up more already to be Noah’s successor. For some reason it seemed to me like a natural fit.)

I will forever note the irony that perhaps the single best refutation of his belief that we Jews control hollywood is the fact that he still has a career.

A League of Their Own is too low, but you have the correct pick for #1.

Glad she was able to help and that she is spending time protecting children from school shootings, instead of her usual strategy of protecting them from going to school with Jewish kids. (The horror.)

Because I’m not pretending. They do break, and often easily (especially if they’re not superbly-made). I’m not sure why you seem determined to not grasp this concept.

So I can go back to hoping for a second season of Hawkeye?

I don’t mind longer-form storytelling. Sometimes it is necessary to give the plot, characters, and worldbuilding the depth they deserve. But if you aren’t a fantastically gifted filmmaker (like Spielberg) and/or you aren’t telling a truly epic story (like LotR), just turn it into a damn TV show. It’s not like it would

I mean... real swords definitely do break, and often way more easily than you’d think. (Especially if you’re doing something like whacking rocks with them.) And that’s assuming Hyrule has top-notch metallurgy - otherwise, something like just dropping a sword on a hard surface could break it.

Am I the only one who thinks it looks fine? It’s one thing if the graphics get in the way of playing or enjoying the world, but unless there are huge framerate jobs (I don’t mean 30 fps, I mean, like, 10 fps), I’ve never had less-than-cutting-edge graphics affect my enjoyment of a game. After growing up with janky poly

I say this as someone who is somewhat in favor of presenting works as they were originally written, but... seriously, why is this a problem? Sure, context is important, but I also think it’s not unreasonable for someone to want to read a classic without having to spend twice as many hours researching social norms of