“Can I get a location from the audience?”
“Can I get a location from the audience?”
She’s a Johnstonian, so she calls it impro.
But everyone hates The Harold!
I like tacos. And yet here I am, not eating one.
“You remembered to replace that working title with something better before you submitted the script to the studio, right?’
I look forward to hearing which religion he’s embraced as part of his journey of healing and accountability.
Being English, he of course refers to the device as an exercise footcycle.
I don’t get the feeling he’s against people having any kind of opinion on his work, just that if you’re going to express it in a public forum you should put some though into it. And I don’t entirely disagree. Certainly criticism, when done well, is one of the finest forms of writing.
Despite generally being a Nolan fan, I haven’t gotten around to ‘Tenet’ or ‘Dunkirk’. (Not a big one for WWII films, honestly.) I’ve heard mixed things but I should probably check it out someday.
I was going to say that if Sam Barsanti, for example, is wondering what people think of his critical abilities, it wouldn’t take an excessive amount of time digging in the comments section to find out.
I was at a brewery just before Christmas and witnessed a guy, very drunk, being removed from the premises because he was swearing, yelling and throwing shit around, apparently because he lost his sunglasses and was upset about it. It was clearly going to turn to violence pretty soon if he wasn’t removed. One of the…
Goddamn sonofabitch.
The show “of course has the stamp of approval from Elvis Presley Enterprises, which says ‘You can dump the money just over there with that pile.’”
It’s a tiny spike on an otherwise flatlining heart monitor, but I have also noticed a few articles here recently that have some of the depth and intellectual vigour of the old AV Club. I don’t know if it’s a trend they can keep up in the current media landscape, but I hope so.
I’m loving this little whodunnit renaissance we seem to be going through at the moment.
We all know that the proper way to do special effects for ‘Doctor Who’ is to raid the BBC stationery cupboard and make the week’s monster out of whatever you can glue together.
To be fair, there were some terrible standalone episodes too. ‘Schizogeny’, anyone?
How about a compromise: four episodes, each nine hours long?
But your tattoo refers to the old AV Club commentor, right?