With his jacket in the header photo, I seriously thought for a second it was a weird Super Mario Bros-style live action take where they just made the character human instead of trying to portray a giant dog or spiky dragon.
With his jacket in the header photo, I seriously thought for a second it was a weird Super Mario Bros-style live action take where they just made the character human instead of trying to portray a giant dog or spiky dragon.
Maybe the F-words were the friends we made along the way.
Hopefully Flanagan will stick the landing this time. Giving that show a happy ending by arbitrarily changing the nature of the house after spending 9 episodes unambiguously depicting it as a bad place with malevolent intentions was a terrible decision.
Hate to say it, but D&D made the right decision and maintained a holistic vision for the show’s ending. Excellent direction would have been jarring alongside piddle-poor writing.
Man, these grey comments about workers not being able to handle the content of a game they signed on to make, way to miss the point. Exposure to material like this effects the human psyche negatively, blanket statement, end of story. Even if the extent of that damage is desensitization and is largely not at a…
I’m glad to see that we give full attribution to him in the article, but I’m perplexed why headlines like this utilize “somebody” as the identifier. I get Driscoll isn’t widely-enough known to justify his name as the call-to-attention atop the article. But can’t we identify him with something other than the most…
I also am completely perplexed as to what the point of this was, other than to say Netflix makes his job harder.
Came here to post this. Good job, Jamie.
Or Steven Moffat is super full of himself and the show gets worse as it goes on:
He was, by far, my favorite part of Bandersnatch. For a few seconds I thought he was Richard Ayoade with bleached hair.
Spit Shouting Ejection Tragik
Gettin those sweet sweet clicks!
Yup.
Wait until you get to the part where he asks why she gets more shit than Noah Baumbach and she replies that she’s not sure that’s true and he has to say “I think it is true” so she can answer his loaded question.
That headline is misleading, especially when “ugh” was first brought up by the interviewer as a possible answer to the question.
I hear 42 jumps is where it gets really good. My buddy says that 82 jumps is his favorite part, but if you really want to experience the breadth of that chapter, 101 jumps is truly the capstone.