keysersoze21
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keysersoze21

Agreed. You'd be hard pressed to find an opening (well, sort of opening since it had the flashback scene first) scene set the tone for a movie as well as that scene did. It told you everything you needed to know. It was big, it was epic, it was sci fi, and it was goofy and fun.

Well it worked extremely well in the trailer, anyway.

I was going to say that about the suit, but then if you notice, when he walks in there are other people in business attire there as well.

This show is so goddamn good, you guys. And it hit me that the way it builds tension with long, wordless sequences where virtually nothing happens but it's still riveting is downright Hitchcockian. I was struck this morning, after thinking about the episode, by how much Jimmy waiting in Los Pollos Hermanos reminded me

Ah, those were the days, when Spielberg and Lucas wanted to have it that Indiana Jones had boned Marion when she was 12 years old. Gold, Jerry! Gold!

I mean, Chewie is used to being overlooked by Leia. Just look at the whole medal debacle at the end of the first movie.

I got my wife an original NES with a shit ton of games on eBay a few years back and it stopped working after like 2 weeks. Stupid old game systems made available for low prices by strangers online…

Did you mention that her best friend is a talking pie?

I was about to say that'd be hilarious but then realized if that happened, this dude would probably harm himself. I mean, in a way that doesn't involve eating a picture of a stranger. I mean in a serious way.

This is unhealthy. And I don't mean just in the obvious ways. This guy is only a degree or two removed from, say, Robert De Niro in "The Fan."

"No no, you guys, I was talking about ALBERT Hitler. I used to play in a softball beer league with him. Good guy. Never gassed a single person."

It's ok, Tom Holland. I've never watched Mad Men or The Sopranos. I've only seen small snippets of Gone With the Wind. I never made it through Citizen Kane because I found it to be painfully boring. I walked out of the theater when I went to see Lost in Translation because, again, holy shit is that movie painfully

The one that offends me most there is, without question, Die Hard. And also Step Up 2, but that goes without saying.

I can't stand Pizza Hut, for the most part, these days. But man, can I relate to this column. I grew up in the 80s as well, and for me there was NOTHING better than a personal pan, cheese pizza from Pizza Hut. Well, except maybe for a slice of Sbarro whenever we went to a mall that happened to have a stand in the food

Seriously. We watched a big chunk of time just sitting and looking silently out his window… yet it was somehow riveting. This show, man. So fucking good.

Sepinwall had a good take in that Chuck is perhaps trying to set Jimmy up for an actual crime, as in catching Jimmy breaking into the locked desk to steal the tape. As Sepinwall said, "the cover up is worse than the crime." If, that is, it turns out to be what Chuck has planned. But it certainly makes sense to me.

Sounds like that Mabel book might not offer up many clues; on "Talking Saul" (holy shit, really?), Gilligan just said that it's purely a nod to his mom, who used to read that book to him and his brother.

Oh god, you scared me. I saw a Veep review and thought I had somehow missed the premiere. Don't do that to me, you guys.

It's amazing what "Immigrant Song" can do for a trailer like this. I really wonder if I'd have liked this trailer as much as I do had they not used that song.

Don't you mean sexual Thorientation?