irrenmann--disqus
irrenmann
irrenmann--disqus

No, regular viewer. Just always thought the Ward actor gave a good performance.

"This is pie-in-the-sky thinking, but if Aida can bring digital Fitz over, can we please get a real-life good guy Ward at the same time? I’m really enjoying rebooted Grant Ward."

Every time we see Aderholt, I start worrying he's gonna tell Stan he just bought a boat…

Technically, it meant countries that were not aligned with either side in the Cold War, though the meaning became diluted over time. But it might show us something a little more interesting about Elizabeth if we read it that way as she imagines her alternate life.

I was greatly impressed with the naturalistic performance of Darya Ekamasova as Sofia. Like that of Brandon J. Dirden as Aderholt, such non-showy ways of bringing a character to life really help me buy the time and place in which the series is set instead of watching it as "a show" every moment.

Jones is only 43. I was a little surprised to find this out.

As if cancer risk doesn't increase from living an unhealthy lifestyle….

When he was looking out at the Death Star and you saw his reflection in the window, that was good, and enough, and no one would have objected if he stayed focused on the station and never turned toward the annoying subordinate.

"And the moment that Fitz, when describing Daisy’s refusal to bend to Hydra’s will, utters the phrase “Nevertheless, she persisted,” it became clear the show was leaving behind its former tactic of satisfying itself with coy allusions and nods to the contemporary political reality in the U.S."

"giant creep who drools over the murder of innocent children"

"Did you ever hear her song called “Dear Future Husband”? What kind of feminist writes the most heteronormative—forget about feminism, this is the most heteronormative backwards shit."

Congrats to Jones for being mainstream enough for this to be a thing.

No. Paige is a worthwhile character, and I would have bet money from the beginning that she'd turn out to be a major part of the series.

His name was Victor.

The look on Philip's face in a couple of scenes from the last two episodes leaves me with zero doubt that he is considering the idea of himself as a bad guy. And now he thinks it runs in the family.

The text here doesn't really read like this is an "average" quality film, as the C grade would suggest. It sounded worse there: "suffocating," "stultifying," "bunk."

"And yet, all these people are protesting because of a video that attacks the memory of her dead son? What exactly am I missing?"

If a part was previously played by Lee Strasberg and you take it on, all I can say is "good luck with that." Yes, even if an Oscar winner is the one giving it a try.

I've never watched his show, but thinking of shows I do watch, I can't imagine discontinuing the practice of viewing one them because of something like a star having settled cases. There's no proof of wrongdoing or admission of guilt, and where would my judgment of that person come from?

"Raping women?" What a ridiculous exaggeration. Is this how you revise history? Accept the loss!