Who built the Statue of Taweret in Lost?
Who built the Statue of Taweret in Lost?
Gonna take issues with two of them because that's my job being a geek online:
Also: Total Recall, that final question at the end, was this real or all the big fantasy Recall gave Quaid of the secret agent hero dream?
Shouldn't number 3 be: Why didn't all the Jaegers have swords all the time? It was super effective!
You are correct. L O S T was a show that required people to pay attention all the way through. And in the final episode they made it crystal clear that everything that happened on the Island really happened. Was the ending perfect? No. IN the 100+ episode run of any show, there are going to be episodes that are…
As I'm sure you've heard, countries with stricter gun laws and more liberal policies in general tend to have a much lower homicide rate than the US. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c… I'm not sure you're really winning the logic prize. There's no evidence at all that more guns = less crime. In fact, statistics…
I will watch it specifically because of Lindelof. Fuck the haters. L O S T was amazing and has earned Lindelof a definite viewing from me.
Honestly, though, if Catelyn hadn't grabbed Tyrion and taken him to the Vale in the first place, there wouldn't have been a war. Talk about bad decisions.
Very much disagree with almost all of this. The Daenerys book scene was fairly unrealistic as it was, even if it was a bit sweeter. Also, that quote is completely contradictory to the weeks that follow, when she was taken nightly by Drogo. Sansa doesn't plan her own escape within the books: at each step, Littlefinger…
Personally, I can't wait for Tyrion and Tywin to settle their quarrel.
Last month we told you about 20 terms every self-respecting futurist should know, but now it's time to turn our…
The movie isn't meant to have a narrative conflict; its purpose is right there in the title. It's meant for people to reassure themselves of their faith in an increasingly educated, questioning, critically thinking society.
Yeah, it's hard to picture a "grounded" story when three of your four leads are a stretchy man, a dude on fire, and a guy made out of rocks.
These two were *adorable* together.
Amusingly enough, you throw 300: Rise of an Empire along with the likes of Son of the Mask and In The Name of the King/The Scorpion King parts 2 and 3. Why with sequels of low-budget movies nobody cares about instead of other "blockbuster" movies?
Correction: Agent Blake was NOT shot. He had his chest caved in from a super-stomp from Deathlok. He's in critical condition, but not quite on the brink of death. Personally, I think Blake is Hydra too—this would explain why Deathlok didn't finish him off, why Blake didn't go for a headshot, and why Blake had the…
He's Thor. His plan amounts to "hit things with my hammer". That's ALWAYS his plan.
Loki did send the Destroyer to kill Thor and wipe out a town of humans, so there were reasons to be a bit irritated with his brother.
Jaime waving "bye" from this spot was kind of hilarious.
What stood out for me was the recovery of needle part and how Arya started turning into a cold heart killer. The slow pithing of the victims with the swords all the while wearing that cruel but sad smile was one great piece of acting right there that without fail drives the point home.