mr-saxon
MrSaxon
mr-saxon

I'd argue Winchester was the better performer, as he managed to make the straight man of the duo equally interesting whilst also performing in an incredibly authentic-sounding fake accent. Hell, he's the first American I could actually see as James Bond.

*Keeps pressing the downvote button*

This thread is the true rise of the villains!

Yeah, they were great! Steven Moffat also has a co-writer's credit on the next script which indicates it probably has deeper ties to the overall season arc than the trailer makes it look (or maybe he just REALLY wanted to write for some space vikings).

Whoops! And to think I've watched it twice already…

Ha, I kind of like it. Very funky. You can't beat the original, though.

This is shaping up to be a wonderful season. I had my problems with the first two-parter but they were still good enough for me to have already rewatched (and enjoyed again), and this two-parter was definitely one of my favorites since the show came back. I'm much preferring Capaldi's Doctor this season because,

Yeah, it looked fine in the full daylight scene to me.

' "Who wrote Beethoven's symphonies" was a good talking point and a funny introduction that then fell flat in the rest of the episode simply because it didn't relate to almost everything happening.'

You got it, buddy!

I hope not. I sent my bank details to titanicboner@gmail.com and am expecting my shipment of viagra tomorrow. :(

With Steve Guttenberg as Steve Jobs.

But this show has a White-Dude-With-Stubble quota that absolutely HAS to be met!

I approve of you using the term "on the other hand" when discussing Coulson.

You can trace the origins back to their original Sherlock Holmes adaption, where the title character was a Latino gangbanger solving crimes in LA while pimpin' out dem hoes. It's almost a shame that "Word Up Holmes" was cancelled before it reached the screen, really.

This made me laugh WAY more than it should have done. My co-workers think I'm insane now.

Tom Hardy should play both, using CGI trickery.

In a way, we're all Stephanie Meyer.

Are you sure you weren't watching John Carpenter's "The Thing: The Musical?"

"not because they're funny (they're not),"