heedless--disqus
heedless
heedless--disqus

I get a little itch whenever someone equivocates between the US and the Soviets. Not because I particularly want to paint Americans as saints, but because communism is dangerous, and it is important that people remember that.

The Communists were ugly and brutal in both their foreign adventures and their domestic policy to a degree that Americans find difficult to comprehend and never even approached.

I may be misremembering this, but at least in the train station fight in Supremacy, the camera's movements mirrored Bourne's. When he charged one of the agents, the camera's swooped in, and when he retreated, it slipped sideways to a wider shot. It felt as though you were making those moves yourself.

H.W. Bush, actually, and I think if predates him too.

"Appropriation": noun

It was pretty weird to this American's ears.

The only good and tolerant opinion is that he deserves to be burned at the stake. Anything else is crimethink.

The only good and tolerant opinion is that he deserves to be burned at the stake. Anything else is crimethink.

Perhaps in a way that makes little narrative sense, but does answer the question "There are still 5 episodes left in the season, how the fuck does he plan to fill them?"

I know. I just saw him on YouTube ranting about that.

And a hint of enriched uranium.

And yet he still couldn't convince that hotel masseuse to give him some TONGUE.

How dare you mourn this celebrity!

Supposedly, the scene was supposed to involve some major hand-to-hand fighting, but Harrison Ford got food poisoning, so they ad-libbed something less strenuous.

Doesn't he have an island or something?

How would that be "amazing"? Sad and slightly ghoulish would be more like it.

In Florida, no less.

I'd highly recommend The Adventures of Robin Hood as well. The swordfight between Flynn and Rathbone is intense, plus you get Claude Raines as Prince John. He's every bit as awesome as you'd expect.

But sadly, no Brad Bird.

Charming.