It's also inaccurate. They were black men. Men of her tribe. The author added a racist point where there was none.
It's also inaccurate. They were black men. Men of her tribe. The author added a racist point where there was none.
The First Slayer was bonded with a demon by men of her tribe, not "white men." Where did you get the idea that it was "white men" who did it?
This four episode "pilot" kills! I had not a single problem with anything, other than I'm ready for the next 8 episodes right now! It was well animated, perfectly paced, the main characters were compelling and engaging (the church may have been a bit TOO corrupt to the point of being a silly trope, but there were…
All the episodes are set in the (not-too-distant) future.
Any list that gives recognition to Disney Duck comics, especially of Don Rosa, is aces!
The Maltese Falcon, anyone? The John Huston/Humphrey Bogart classic was the third time the story had been adapted in ten years, and it was superior in every way.
"Pretty in Pink"
Reminds me of The Simpsons Season 1 Episode "There's No Disgrace Like Home" appearing in Die Hard 2. Pretty much guarantees that a cartoon series will be among the best, most long-lived television shows of all time! RICK AND MORTY, A HUNDRED YEARS!
In the Lost Continent episode, Joel got an electric shock in his pants for refusing to enter the theater.
Never watched this show, but I clicked on it for the MST3K reference. Good job!
No "Kyle's Mom Is a Big Fat Bitch" from the Chef Aid album?
Out of Control had an episode about "Magic" that featured an inept magician (and of course I can't remember the character name) played by Joel Hodgson. I saw it in the mid 80s and was strangely intrigued by his magic trick props. So in the mid-90s, when I discovered a little show called "Mystery Science Theater…
Race for your Life, Charlie Brown was my first exposure to Peanuts, even superseding the TV specials. I bought all four films on DVD yesterday, and when that opening song on "Race" starts up, I'm a kid again, enjoying the film, faults and all. Bon Voyage and A Boy also hold up for me too. Snoopy Come Home was one I…
YES! YES YES YES!!! The fact that no Halloween film has done this is CRAZY! It's so simple, so perfect, it's crazy it took this long for someone to actually do it. And in my comment, that is the victim whose death moved me.
The best Halloween stories are the ones that don't try to humanize Michael Myers: he didn't have a younger sister who was adopted and now he wants to kill, he doesn't have a niece that he's compelled to chase because of the machinations of a druid cult, he wasn't the product of an abusive home nor led by the specter…
PC Principal again calls out Leslie for talking during assembly, only this time she obviously WASN'T talking. I can't wait for Leslie to take out PC Principal by the end of the season.
In Morty's bad memories of Summer, he's watering the lawn where his and Rick's dead bodies were buried at the end of Rick Potion #9. Looks like they've lived there long enough now for the grass to have fully grown back.
Actually, Homer's homophobia isn't entirely uncharacteristic. Several off-hand jokes he's made in previous episodes allude to an objection, if not outright revulsion, of homosexuality, at least insofar as its ability to change him. "Lisa's Pony" has him taking the easy way to earning Lisa's love back not just…
Was that a The World's End reference with the band name note? If so, I approve!
Ichabod dropped the word "schattenjäger" in this episode. Between Marie LaVeau featuring in American Horror Story (and mentioned here on AV Club) and this, this is DEFINITELY the right time to bring back Gabriel Knight!