mikep42671
jackofallasses
mikep42671

I’m pretty certain that an actual “nice guy,” if such a person exists in a non-cringeworthy way, would not be willing to appear on this program in the first place.

I remember once saying that nothing will ever sink beneath The Bachelor.

I just wanted to point out that Margot Robbie’s feet are conspicuously front and center on that cover of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. I’m not trying to kink-shame; I just couldn’t help but notice how on-brand it is for the guy. Even venturing into novelizations QT finds a way.

Just FYI it clearly reads like you’re desperate to hate the book.

Just dropping in to note that the Tarantino book reads like a fun fusion of early (Western) and late (crime/slice-of-life) Elmore Leonard. Also, a good chunk of the book consists of tales of Old Hollywood QT heard from Kurt Russell, and they’re delightful.

I tend to be a little more forgiving of dialogue when editing - your characters may very well speak like that, and I think it’s more important for them to stay true their characterisation. Otherwise they all end up sounding the same, and that’s how you get science fiction/fantasy characters.

He Who Remains really intrigued me with just how malevolent he’s meant to be. His goal to stop a multiversal war is obviously worthy, but it’s hard to know what the consequences of that action really is, and Majors’ performance suggests that HWR may very well be hiding something with regards to that.

I loved Richard Grant’s version.

I’ve added it to my list just based off of you and so many other folks on this page speaking so highly of it. I remember watching the trailer a while ago and not being hooked by it, but I revisited it just now and every comment underneath it on youtube is basically “this trailer doesn’t do the show justice.” So I’m

I’m probably extremely overthinking this but the emphasis on the apples had me thinking they were going for a Garden of Eden metaphor. Or maybe he just likes apples.

I know there’s a famous thought problem about this that The Good Place brought up. Basically if I come across another version of me who has had an equal lifetime of different experiences, are they still inherently me? How much does the environmental experience define your who you are.

That was pretty entertaining for what was essentially a 45-minute-long info dump. Majors is a treat to watch playing what is essentially a bratty sociopath.

I think Ted Lasso is marvelous, and everyone I know who has watched it has loved it. It operates along the same vein as Schitt’s Creek and Parks & Rec, in that it has a big heart and it isn’t interested in punching down, but it also isn’t interested in being an “easy” or thoughtless comedy. Ultimately, I think whether

I didn’t like how the goateed hipster son in Bao didn’t seem to appreciate his mom. Hopefully after his marriage with the cute white girl fails his mom will still keep in touch with her — they seemed to have a good time making dumplings together.

You’re just upset that Bob didn’t eat Jak Jak.

no Emmy recognition for Backstory, at the very least, is absolute bullshit 

YMMV , I’ve tried it a bit and I just don’t get it , its fine,  but not that funny but a lot of people seem to love it so I'm the outlier I guess ...Mythic Quest is amazing though.

I would say yes. I really really enjoy it (and am very happy that season 2 premieres next week). Ted Lasso has it all:

Another WTF: the only acting nomination for the entire cast of Falcon & Winter Soldier is... Don Cheadle, who had maybe three or four extremely uneventful minutes of screen time. Did they mix him up with the terrific Carl Lumbly?

Antony Starr for sure, that casting and performance is PERFECT.