jayrig5
jayrig5
jayrig5

No but it was tough to keep up with him speaking backwards 

I always felt like the relationship with the Martin Sheen character should have gotten more time than the Amy Adams character, thematically. Sheen also played a key pseudo father figure for him in The Departed.

Indiana a possibility too

IIRC (and I might not) Michael Cera and Will Arnett came off incredibly well simply by not just rushing to defend Tambor while Cross/Bateman fell all over themselves to do so while making Walter feel like shit.

I was thinking Ted Danson on The Good Place. 

Ice Storm

Not all of the Roz stuff held up but way more of it did than you’d expect from that era for that character.

Sure, though there are limited jobs. More projects paying union scale to more workers improves more lives and probably leads to a wider array of stories being told via cinema 

I'd bet it hits YouTube pretty quickly given the financial backing. 

Yeah, I’ve definitely encountered these (or items similar enough to be in the same family) in Indiana.

I like the rising crust, but my issue has always been with the sauce, in both taste (too sweet) and quantity (way, way too much, imo.) 

That title card is really working for me as an homage to '90s horror design. Like a more adult Goosebumps cover. 

Listen this is 4 months later but she trashed the writing on her show and that’s effectively the same thing when it comes to perception. I think it’s pretty clear I wasn’t saying that was her literal quote. But cape away! 

It kind of functioned as an extended post-credits sequence.

I finally saw this and it honestly is a perfect B- movie. Honestly maybe a B. It subverted a lot of my expectations on the margins in ways that elevated the pretty standard main plot. 

A legitimately gifted performer and storyteller. This is awful. 

Presumably with “John Carpenter's Ghosts of Mars" but I agree John Carter is the better fit lol 

Yeah, I kind of respect what they’re doing with it (it truly does feel like they took a character we know and put him in a completely unfamiliar environment and we’re seeing what happens, and it also makes sense that Raylan has changed in the intervening years, and it ALSO makes sense they wouldn’t link back to events

Charlie even. 

James Acaster, Cold Lasagne, Hate Myself, 1999. That's all.