johnhuizar--disqus
DugongMotorboatJoust
johnhuizar--disqus

It was a crass analogy, but he clearly wasn't actually comparing the experience to mass human suffering, just pointing out that hordes of screaming humans are terrifying and surreal, and that historically speaking, the only reasons you would formerly have found such a group of screamers would have involved someone's

The Nazis were pretty into shipping, as I recall.

This was the darkest side of the Khmer Rouge.

That was at least one thing, I think, though math was never my best subject.

Basically at this point 'hipster' has gone from 'person taking ironic detachment in consumption and self-presentation to ridiculous extremes' to mean simply 'contrarian' or worse, 'holder of contrary viewpoint.'

At the very least, I wish they had included Pazzi's exploitation of the Roma to try to get Lecter's fingerprints, including his willingness to make sure that the one that Lecter cut actually died. Pazzi ought to be a cautionary tale for Jack, Will, Alana, and Chilton.

Given Walker's very tense scene with the frat boys when he was on the run, where he almost killed them both not so much for their disrespect to him but for their lack of loyalty to each other, I feel like Boon's diner scene was may well have been another repurposed Walker scene.

I've ridden on one before, but not in Europe. There's an old-fashioned train of that sort that runs between Durango and Silverton through a beautiful national forest in southwestern Colorado.

I love how Hannibal tried to get inside Jack's head, and it backfired on him royally. Jack took a page out of Hannibal's book (sneaking up on sock feet) and then unleashed hell.

Jonathan Tucker did an amazing job in the time he was given, and it really saved the season. Season 5 was basically unraveled by Edi Athegi (Jean Baptiste) deciding he wanted to leave the show, when he was one of the biggest players in how the season was supposed to unfold.

Do you mean on seeing in the theater, or purchasing? If in the theater, Mad Max. But I'm pretty picky about what movies I will actually buy physical copies of (particularly for commentary tracks), and Ex Machina gets the slot.

I wish we could have seen what the season was originally intended to be before Garret Dillahunt had to be written out due to scheduling issues, but yeah, it was really great.

You're forgetting the 1997 Jack Lemmon remake, in which George C Scott played the role earlier filled by Lee J. Cobb.

I'm normally not fond of epilogues, especially ones that cut to years later, but man, that finale hit all the right notes. I loved it.

(Hint: Season 2 Loretta McCready=Ree Dolly)

The connection is more direct. Loretta's character and storyline from season 2 of Justified were thoroughly inspired by Winter's Bone.

I really enjoyed The Death of Sweet Mister. It's another tale of someone trying to keep a family together in the face of crushing rural poverty, but more in the context of an unhealthy codependency between mother and infantilized teenage son. Alternately poignant and thoroughly creepy.

It's something that goes hand in hand with democracy. The tools and terms of engagement in a democracy are not reason and persuasion, they're demagoguery, outrage, and public shaming.

Soo-ee!

Maybe he can go nag the sausage in Garret Jacob Hobbs' old freezer.