The first Karate Kid is a stone cold classic, where even the bad guys are relatable (to some extent at least).
It's also infinitely quotable, even today it's impossible to do more than one or two martial arts classes before hearing "sweep the leg!"
The first Karate Kid is a stone cold classic, where even the bad guys are relatable (to some extent at least).
It's also infinitely quotable, even today it's impossible to do more than one or two martial arts classes before hearing "sweep the leg!"
That's pretty sweet. Vaccarino has made a big impact (I love Kingdom Builder especially) and getting to playtest Dominion is kinda like getting to proof read the New Testament of board gaming or something.
Which games? As a true board game geek I'm actually more interested than any (mostly) sane person should be.
I just hope the people in the boat don't look up.
*hits face on actual glass window instead of sugar glass*
Yeah that was one of the awesome things about the first Raid.
Uhh what? 148 minutes?!
I'm not surprised the list includeds game designers: going from reviewing games to designing them doesn't seem like that big of a leap compared to something like going from reviewing films to directing them.
Just how bad was the last season?
Everything in that scene made Adalind and her protector seem like not quite the smartest persons on this planet: they shot one car full of holes and afterwards checked the dead henchman for car keys. I bet they would've felt pretty silly if the keys had been for the car they just destroyed.
As far as filler goes I thought this was a decent episode. It wasn't all that original, but well directed and Carlo Rota did an excellent job.
Billion Dollar Babies really show what a difference one person can make. Remove one band member and the group that created some of the finest rock albums ever turns into an awful parody of itself.
The spaceship in that picture looks like a helicopter had sex with a yacht in space.
That dude clearly gets his grooming tips from Murray of Flight of The Conchords.
This is 100% true.
Going by the always controversial Spotify method it is his most popular song by a wide margin: All Along The Watchtower has twice the plays of Hendrix's second biggest hit (Purple Haze).
Makes one wonder how tv-show budgeting works. Would've made more sense to me to have Dalia in the episode and maybe scale down the George-plotline, which involved several locations and many extras.
It seems to me the show is about making its female lead seem as unlikeable as possible.
As true as that is, I'd still like to see user ratings back as I think we'd see a big discrepancy between the two ratings on Suburgatory.
That is the most majestic thing I have ever seen.