To clarify what I already said, I like the show. I just think Jimmy's story is the weakest part of it.
To clarify what I already said, I like the show. I just think Jimmy's story is the weakest part of it.
I watched two episodes of BB: the pilot and the one where Krysten Ritter dies. Wasn't really my bag either.
We’ve seen many drug-fueled rise-and-fall tales from him before (Goodfellas and Casino), but we’ve also seen the other side with The Wolf Of Wall Street.
So, I just got into BCS since it came out on Netflix, binged on it, and then caught this season's two episodes on a friend's cable account.
I'm a big Moore fan myself. Right now I'm loving the Craig era. I'm not sure whom I'd pick as my favorite, but when I go back to watch "older" 007 it's almost always Moore (unless it's You Only Live Twice).
I absolutely love this movie. Unironically. The theme is one of the reasons. Walken and not caring what anyone thinks about Roger Moore-era Bond are the others.
"ice-pick-sharp keyboard stabs" is the best description of this song I've ever read and one of the best descriptions of a music's sonic quality, as well.
How on Earth is this a simple failure instead of an all-out fiasco?
I hated this show when I watched the first episode. Yet, I kept watching, and saw all of them. This is thanks largely to Nasim Pedrad, whom I love playing just about any character.
I'll have to scroll up that cinema later.
Yeah this was not something I considered a buoy, either back in the day or in reruns.
It was WAY more melancholy than trailers let on. It was pretty much nothing but persistent melancholia. Some parts of the movie were slightly less melancholy that others. If feeling empty for 107 minutes is what you're looking for, this mystical romp is for you!
Okay. I concede. http://www.hollywoodreporte…
Right. So you then conclude he's going to run back? That's a leap.
He might believe it, and you might believe it, but then he goes on Inside Mad Men and discusses metaphors and subtext.
If Don ends up back at McCann then I can see Peggy writing it. I can also see Teddy Chaough tapping her to write it (and Stan to direct it). So I suppose it's a possibility.
So, have you watched any of the "Inside Mad Men" clips that AMC puts out after every episode? Because Weiner discusses metaphors and subtext in them constantly. Maybe you mean something other than metaphors and subtext…
And every time he sees Coke right behind him he runs further away. You're right. It's not vague at all.
I don't think either of those are implications about where Don's going. Those are simply variations on one of the show's themes.
Right. Peggy isn't important enough at McCann to be on Coke that soon.