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hcduvall
hcduvall--disqus

She's in the trailer wielding sword and shield vs. rifles, I'm not sure about what advanced tech she'll be bringing in, but that's what she brought? In general, WWI makes for a juxtaposition of what "the best trained warrior" would entail, and could be an exploration of ethos and the like. Hell, it kind of means I

General muted tone for me.

I like the switch to WWI, I hate the colors…what I thought was really funny though was the description of her as always training for war. That thought has always been a skill in her cv—maybe it's the particular context of WWI and watching her fight soldiers with guns—but it struck me this time as making her kind of a

I love the movie definitely in large part for the super effective genreness of it—it's not the best looking thing, but it's the best that the money they had could buy and shows more inventiveness than many movies many times bigger. But it' how it actually challenges things. Don't like the kids? The kids aren't let off

Someone reading Injection! I've been enjoying it, seems a bit more focused than say Supreme: Blue Rose, which was the last business of his I read. Also, some character based humor. Familiar characters, admittedly, but something.

I liked it. I especially like Mad Mikkelsen as a lead in these things—he's still and unfurled while I read Gosling (at least in Drive) as holding still instead of being still. Refn's use of violence in the movies of his I prefer is intense but not frequent. Certainly, it's pace has bored other people, but the

I had seen the Pusher trilogy and Valhalla Rising, but the first of Refn's movies that people I knew saw was Drive. I remember them walking away from that one commenting, well, all the Refnness of it and me going "yup". And whenever people talk about the lack of speaking lines for the lead I remember the one about

It really seems out of place—for one, is it a documentary? Not that documentaries are unimpeachable things, but a straight on dramatization by it's very creation is going to be compromised in a way that a journalistic product at least tries not to.

I've been reading the comments and I want to declare my love for you all, my hypothetical childhood best friends with identical reading habits.

I think I may have spent a period of my childhood reading Dragonlance novels exclusively. I don't remember if anything else was any good, but the Legend of Huma was a worthwhile spinoff/prequel.

Naw, they went with listing 40 shows last week. Which, on the one hand, there's more good tv ever, and on the other, is either a weak avenue to click bait (two articles) and also FORTY shows. Which is another kind of laziness.

I used my triceratops not for war, but for farming. I miss those guys.

I keep expecting one of these we're sorry convos to be about how we'll try to smarten it up what are generally fun but pretty dumb movies, but they're always about how we managed our audience's expectations wrong. This came closest, but still doesn't quite approach the fact that the thoughtfulness that would eliminate

I enjoyed the movie, but it was dumb. I don't think it's much disliked at all (as the stats suggest), but since it's so easy to make fun of, maybe people are confusing "this is a thing that's made fun of" with "this is a thing that's disliked"?

Wait, can someone explain to me the plot of The Cobbler so I don't have to watch it? Because it sounds terrible but I need to know how he's a serial killer in it.

Are the Corto Maltese printings still terrible though? I felt pretty burned by the first one that came out a few years ago. Even accepting the non-original layout—they were approved by Pratt—the scans the book was printed from were awful.

I'm heartened to read your opinion of Daytripper—I was starting to think I was the only one who thought that.

Something old, something new, more satisfying than I expected it to be really. And gorgeous.

I do dig her stuff, but I'm mildly convinced her fandom significantly due to people being charmed by her persona and videos rather than straight up her music. There's a lot going on that I recognize, it's not so much new to me but new to her? I don't think articulately about music much so this is going to come off as

I know the grind is practically an expected feature in these sorts of games, but I would love game developers everywhere (and to a certain extent, fans) to shift toward a "repetition isn't content" philosophy.