We are getting it on Itunes, though, on the day! (As opposed to not at all) - and hey, the price you pay for the film will be the price you'd pay for a movie ticket :)
We are getting it on Itunes, though, on the day! (As opposed to not at all) - and hey, the price you pay for the film will be the price you'd pay for a movie ticket :)
Isn't there something about her parents being overally pushy with her career which might have lead to her subsquent problems? Or is that just gossip mongering?
So…is The Following really as awful as I've heard it is? In a so bad it's good or good to mock kind of way or a crushingly defeating all life is pointless kind of way?
Without any oxygen, if the DVD extras for this story are to be believed :)
It's weird that no-one ever talks about the racism in The Two Doctors, which is quite explict throughout. I actually don't think it's anywhere near as bad as it's rep suggests, but I am biased because it is one of the first Doctor Who stories I ever saw.
This hasn't hit Australian TV yet - but it's sad to hear that it's such a dud.
You know what I really have a hard time believing from Hannibal fandom, though, that Hannibal's food looks so appetising. I admit, my own experience with good food is somewhat limited, but when seeing any of Hannibal's food, I just freak out BECAUSE IT'S MADE OF FUCKING PEOPLE and any appeal whatsoever is immedietly…
That your fucking?
Although that does leave an impression.
I have a feeling that the novel exists to, while telling it's own story with a different character, wrap up some of the threads of the main series when it's over.
I think it's best left in the form it is, really. A regular TV series might decide it's best to have a more ordinary character entering Night Vale, losing Cecil's wonderful point of view which makes the series work.
Bryan Fuller, why do you make this show to hurt me? :)
I started listening to Night Vale (independent of all the hype) and to be honest, I found the first couple of episodes too conciously weird, instead of well, just being weird.
Okay, I have never seen the original film or read any of Frank Miller's graphic novels….but those homoerotic undertones aren't intentional? Really?
The whole Wincest thing really is a whole lot of: how? And then I remember it's people on the internet.
I don't get that: season one has it firmly established that Buffy and Xander will never hook up. So…how? A lot of teenage boys projecting themselves onto Xander, maybe?
A second movie is very unlikely, as Rob Thomas is concluding Veronica's tale in two novels which will be published not that long after the movie (two months after?) I do wonder why he's taking this route, but I guess Kristen Bell wants to say farewell to Veronica and put that Frozen exposure to good use.
I'd never read Archie before, except as my cousins place when I was a kid (and I didn't mind slice of life comics at that age, either) , but when I heard about Kevin Keller, I was excited because, hey, there's a character like me! But, I still find the Archieverse a bit bland, although I never reliased that it had a…
I love these episodes, I do, but with Rose, well, I was on guard with the Bad Wolf…development, shall we say, so I set myself up to be disappointed. I understand that Rose's depature had to big and dramatic and important to establish that she was gone for good. I get that: but I find the beach scene really, really…
As a classic series fan, I see what RTD was trying to do here: as with the depature of the last of the original companions and the introduction of the new companion, Stephen, he was trying to impart to the audience that this show would move beyond Rose, but still be about The Doctor. But, it is abrupt, jarring and…