hiemoth
Hiemoth
hiemoth

I do like his visual style a lot. Although I do get some of the choices they made as the attempts in the comics to incorporate Todd to the Bat-Clan has always been really awkward.

Even if I utterly hated this movie, I would still have popped the hell out if Tom Cruise had appeared as Iron Man.

I’ll be honest, I would absolutely hate it if Shepard was once again running around in the next Mass Effect game. For me, there was so much emotion in Shepard’s arc and its conclusion in Mass Effect 3 that I just want that character to know rest. Either in death after one final sacrifice or finally being able to just

She is. I mean you can do movies even if you are on SNL.

I’m so conflicted on this as I don’t want anyone to lose their job, but there has been this weird static at the top of the cast for a while now. Especially on the women’s side as Strong and McKinnon are clearly the primary players of the show, yet at the same time they have essentially cast people who seem to be meant

While I enjoy them as well, I genuinely don’t think they are going over Michaels’s head. Like at all. He knows his show with all the twists and turns involved.

Normally I’d ignore your increasingly bizarre comments, but this level of math self-ownage is kind of epic.

The Understudy sketch was my favorite of the night and those small touches just made it. For some reason the highlight of it was how intentionally bad the Gardner impression was after all those superb impressions.

For me, the issue with Wanda, and actually similarly with Daenarys, wasn’t that they ended up being the villains of the story. As pointed out here, the elements of that character were there with both of them and there is a sense to it. The big problem is that the way the story was told was so bad that it in itself

Weird comment to make about a film that has an officially listed length of 126 minutes.

This is one of the most remarkable self-’cancellations’ in ages in that no one had cancelled Langella before this, yet somehow he managed to make his own position so insanely more difficult. Like Netflix didn’t comment that much on his release, there weren’t that much spills about it to the press, so while it was an

I cannot get over the fact that Langella admitted that a person in charge of the scene literally told him not to do the action that would get him fired before he did it. And not only did he reject that advise, but he dismissively scoffed at it. All this, to him, somehow makes him look like the cruel victim of cruel

That ‘Higher place’ quote really made me go huh. Like I’m not expecting to say they were wrong and it would be dumb to demand such a thing, so no judgement at all for them defending it. But then to try to offer that explanation just made it go off the rails.

While true, this film kind of took that uncertainty to another level. Especially because it seems to expect the audiences just automatically feel like this was such a great missed connection for Stephen. Which made that post-credit scene hilarious for so many wrong reasons.

Thanks for the additional details. The reason I was thinking on the algorithm was because in the interviews about the cancellation of the Babysitters Club, that was brought up as well as the kind of indicators that Netflix was focusing on which were kind of crazy to be honest. Based on that, it did seem like the issue

While I realize it will be a long while, I would so love to read someone from Netflix really explain their decision making process and that algorithm they build everything around, even despite there were massive warning signs that the model they were building couldn’t be sustainable. Yet at the same time they seemed

No issues on the essay and I think that’s a fair argument, even if I don’t personally completely agree with it.

Didn’t Harrow’s staff do a sky beam when he went on top of the pyramid?

To be honest, I don’t think there’s non-head canon answer here. I don’t mean that dismissively, but rather because the way the show presented it requires some head canon to make it work as otherwise it just doesn’t work at all.

I can’t say for certain, but I think Jake is the personality who killed Layla’s father. Remember that Harrow told her that Marc killed her dad and Marc said it was a greedy partner who he tried to shoot before we saw in the flashback Marc putting the gun to his own jaw.