lrgibson1--disqus
LaMar
lrgibson1--disqus

I wanted to highlight some of the Gordon scenes as well (my praise of Toby Huss' Bosworth could go on for some time). I loved his trance during the couples' dinner, clearly meditating on being a multi-millionaire and having his legacy elevated all the while Tom and Cam are relaying their proposal story. I loved his

"So…you consider me a 'key player', then?" Damnit, Toby Huss is dominating this season!

I know this choice is incredibly contemporary but John Bosworth and Cameron Howe from HaCF have really gotten to me in this past two and half seasons. I just watched the most recent episode, "The Threshold", last night. Wow.

Red Foreman is an under-rated TV Dad. Also, I would submit Red and Hyde (as a surrogate father-son relationship).

I'm really enjoying this show. Danson is great (of course). I liked the different small details (the forewords by Malala and Kylie Minogue) were a great touch. Kristen Bell's exaggerated British accent recalls her dialogue with Russell Brand in Forgetting Sarah Marshall and is really delightful. Also, I thought the

I thought that was Ginsberg as well. But I don't think so…

I have but one upvote to give…

Wait, I thought that was Sean Bean?

His acting in Twister is great to watch. Who else would've thought to play a storm chaser as stoner/surfer type?

They should have kept the original book title (All You Need is Kill) and stuck with "Live, Die, Repeat" as the tag. But alas….

C'mon folks, you know it's an Emmy rule that a David Simon show will not receive any nominations…

I would put Bernie on this list. Even in small parts, he's a scene stealer. Two examples: he's in Friday for all of maybe 5 minutes and has some of the most memorable dialogue. Also, he's the only enjoyable part of Player's Club.

She was amazing in Constantine and Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe.

I acknowledge my bias, but I hold fast to the belief that Last Action Hero is an underrated classic. The meta commentary on action films, Arnie's specifically, and Charles Dance as one of the coolest movie villains ever. Also, Ian McKellen as Death from The Seventh Seal: "I don't do fiction!"

Same with Sam Jackson. I watch any crap he's in just to see what hairstyle he's rocking.

Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn.

Similar to Brave which switched directors from a woman to a man during production. The movie itself is tonally ambiguos. I do enjoy the middle of The Good Dinosaur when it becomes a dino-western. I wish that had just been the entire movie: son of a homesteader sets out to help his family, picks up a silent but loyal

Not that it was Best Picture worthy but Flight is essentially…Denzel's performance and that crash sequence. I mean I know we have Don Cheadle, John Goodman, and some other character actors but that's pretty much the whole thing. And I find it compelling to watch every time.

"So or isn't weird when ya girl calls you 'Daddy'?"
"That's completely different… And yes, yes it is."
Plus:
"Well what do you call your gun?"
"Nigga, gun!"
Plus:
"Did you check your jacket?"
"Yes, yes I did." The resigned way Paper Boi looks at Darius, like "no shit, of course I checked there"
A+ episode.
Also agree that

Look, as Dave Chappelle pointed out, there is a lot to say for the fact that many famous Black male actors/comedians have found themselves in drag at some point in their career. However, Tyler Perry is someone who specifically wrote stories that had spoke to a lived experience of a large number of people. Domestic