And he had just bought a new boat named "Live-4-Ever".
And he had just bought a new boat named "Live-4-Ever".
I thought maybe "passing" was some hip new slang.
Not sure what "passing" means for a movie or a book.
Not always, but in IT's case, there is a *lot* of story and I'm afraid that even with two 2+ hour movies, a lot of it will be left out.
Karen doesn't care about Frank personally. She knows there is more to the story that is being deliberately hidden and wants to find out what it is. She knows that Reyes is targeting her firm and is part of this cover-up.
Since this was 10 years ago, Matt and Foggy were obviously influenced by the movie Wedding Crashers which would have been out the previous year.
If you work for the Kingpin, chances are you gonna get killed. In the comics, I can't think of any named character besides The Arranger that survived and stuck around for a long time. The Kingpin goes through a lot of guys in his judo practice, and in Superior Spider-Man we find out that he has a lookalike in his…
It's hard to take the opinions in these reviews seriously when he makes mistakes on little things like this in every review so far.
"I think, if he would've taken her up on her proposal, she'd immediately see his scars and question wtf."
"Boy, remember the time when we got lost in the sewers and we all had sex with Bev? What were we thinking?"
Two movies of 2 hours still leaves out a *lot* of the source material. They can still make a good movie(s), but I'm hoping for as much of the source material as possible.
Preach! I'm watching this season a year after it came out, reading along with these reviews one episode at a time, and I'm confused by the multiple comments complaining about Karen getting hired, given an office at the Bulletin, and writing articles. None of that happened in this episode.
It doesn't matter when someone reads these comments. They are reviews for this single episode - it should not spoil events from future episodes.
Is this something from a future episode? In this episode she isn't given an office. She spends all of her time there in a back room looking through old newspapers. That's not an office.
Spidey defeats the Sandman, but forgot to take pictures.
When does she get an office? Ellison puts her in a back room which contains many shelves of back issues. It's not an office.
Karen is not hired as a journalist. She's using the paper's back issues to research her theory about Frank. Ellison flat out tells her that if it leads to a story that she can't have her name on it, which she is fine with. She just wants to find out the truth.
Thank you. I don't understand all of these comments complaining about how Karen got hired as a reporter and was given an office, when actually Ellison just allowed her to use the paper's back issues to investigate her personal passion project, which he told her (and she agreed) that if it led to a story she could not…
He told Karen that if this led to a story that she could not have any credit for it, which she agreed to. Karen has no interest in getting her name on a story in the paper. She is only interested in finding out the truth.
Karen is not hired as a reporter. She's not hired by Ellison at all. He is just allowing her to use the newspaper's back issues to research a story that she will not be able to write or publish - she agreed to let Ellison get all the credit.