I thought the idea was that they were friends who hung out *until* Rose died, and they grew distant from each other in part because she blamed him for her death and partly because he'd been spending more time with Rose than her.
I thought the idea was that they were friends who hung out *until* Rose died, and they grew distant from each other in part because she blamed him for her death and partly because he'd been spending more time with Rose than her.
I haven't seen any of it yet personally, but a lot of what I hear of S3 sounds especially promising, the exploration of faith, the queer stories, etc., and my brother considers it the best season of the show yet, it having improved each season.
There are plenty of issues with the first five episodes, but I've never understood the perspective that he was ever one of them. When I had yet to really get into the show, Steven was what kept me going because of how incredibly endearing and likable he was.
Despite all his rage, he's still a Luke in a Cage.
Speech is fine, just aggressively mediocre and not especially appealing to me. Les Mis is what primarily informs my hate of Tom Hooper. So poorly directed. And ^5, the Imitation Game is infuriatingly bad and regressive.
I'm not talking film nerds being obsessed with him, more tumblr people and teenage girls.
*Grumble grumble season 3's back half was a fine ending grumble*
I would not love the show nearly as much as I do (I guess this coheres with our respective feelings on the show generally) were it not for Patrick. He resonates with me so much on a personal level. I don't question him being where he is in life relative to his age for a second. Yes, I'm much younger than him, but we…
"Filmmakers originally planned for the cast to be both male and female, but Neil Marshall's business partner realised that horror films almost never have all-female casts. Defying convention, Marshall cast all women into the role, and to avoid making them clichéd, he solicited basic advice from his female friends."
Yeah, having never read Pynchon and only hearing of him fairly recently, and also being a huge PTA fan, I thought it'd be best to avoid reading the book until after seeing the movie just because I didn't want to risk affecting the movie experience.
Kate McKinnon is fucking hilarious. Only person that currently makes SNL worth watching at all.
The movie does its best to ignore that Turing was a gay man and largely softens the horrible things that happened to him, including ultimately ending happily rather than with his suicide. And there's only one woman in the coding team when it was actually 80% women.
At least the character/thematic resolution going on here with Korra ties back to what they tried to do back in season 1 before it inexplicably fell apart.
I regret nothing.
I regret nothing!
Glory is the second best Big Bad after Angel, and I will hear nothing else of the sort. Not to mention that the Mayor was blatantly their first attempt to go bigger-scale than they had before, and it worked fine.
Glory was the best Big Bad besides Angel and I'll hear nothing otherwise.
It's non-premium cable and has Standards and Practices.
He was hired as a freelance writer long after he'd been active as Cookie Monster. He's also fairly open about the secret identity, if you care to know.
You watched the dub? Ehhh. . .