Is it too sappy to think the finale will end with a troubled Jim & Pam watching clips of them together throughout the years and deciding to fully fix their problems? It wouldn't be too far fetched for how this show has been going.
Is it too sappy to think the finale will end with a troubled Jim & Pam watching clips of them together throughout the years and deciding to fully fix their problems? It wouldn't be too far fetched for how this show has been going.
Michonne's lack of dialogue is starting to become comical. She's a stock comic book badass who could easily clear up her problems just by saying something….anything.. "I didn't ditch your group, I was taking on the governor".
I remembered your comment and went into these episodes thinking "The writers are smarter than making Brian pine for Pam." I thought Pam saying "Say hi to Alyssa" was a hint they wouldn't go in that direction, but the Office did. It feels so cliche and last hour to bring up this plot line in the these last 10 episodes.…
I remembered your comment and went into these episodes thinking "The writers are smarter than making Brian pine for Pam." I thought Pam saying "Say hi to Alyssa" was a hint they wouldn't go in that direction, but the Office did. It feels so cliche and last hour to bring up this plot line in the these last 10 episodes.…
My favourite line of his has to be, "We're only human girl we make mistakes, to make it up I do whatever it take / I love you like a fat kid loves cake" from 21 Questions. Now that's some great rhyming.
That scene in the diner at the beginning of season five (where Walt now has a new identity and hair) is after he skipped town and left everything he knew. He meets a woman named Lois, changes his personality and starts a new life. The final scene of the series is when he meets Lois and introduces himself with a goofy…
I completely agree with you. The sadness between Jim and Pam in that scene reminded me of Casino Night in season two when he professes his love to her. This episode got to me in a way the Office hasn't managed to in a long time.
I completely agree with you. The sadness between Jim and Pam in that scene reminded me of Casino Night in season two when he professes his love to her. This episode got to me in a way the Office hasn't managed to in a long time.
According to some gossip sites, she also broke off her engagement this week. It seems like Britney's on a roll.
I enjoyed reading everything Scott Snyder wrote, from Batman and Swamp Thing to his own series American Vampire. There's a very novelistic approach to each issue that makes them memorable. He's quickly become my favourite writer in comics.
I enjoyed reading everything Scott Snyder wrote, from Batman and Swamp Thing to his own series American Vampire. There's a very novelistic approach to each issue that makes them memorable. He's quickly become my favourite writer in comics.
I waited until tonight to see if the season as a whole was worth watching after the mediocrity of the last two. The positive early reviews seemed promising, but I was still skeptical considering the terrible plot last season involved Deb falling in love with her brother and Saw like death traps. It looks like it fell…
I waited until tonight to see if the season as a whole was worth watching after the mediocrity of the last two. The positive early reviews seemed promising, but I was still skeptical considering the terrible plot last season involved Deb falling in love with her brother and Saw like death traps. It looks like it fell…
Isn't this episode 16, with the last two running back to back next week?
Isn't this episode 16, with the last two running back to back next week?
I agree with you, in many places (Reddit for example) they're already turning on TDKR after previously praising it. The same thing happened last year with Inception and virtually any other popular mainstream film.
I agree with you, in many places (Reddit for example) they're already turning on TDKR after previously praising it. The same thing happened last year with Inception and virtually any other popular mainstream film.
Adding to the list of actors mentioned in the comments, what about Michael Keaton as Batman? Wasn't the studio receiving thousands of complaints from fans worrying it would be a comedy?
Adding to the list of actors mentioned in the comments, what about Michael Keaton as Batman? Wasn't the studio receiving thousands of complaints from fans worrying it would be a comedy?
It's slowly becoming a documentary.