That's fair enough.
That's fair enough.
Exactly! He was someone I had no opinion of until I read about his insufferable behavior on set.
I'm sorry—maybe my pathological hatred for Leto is blinding me—but why are we referring to him as "the noted method actor"? I feel like that's lending him credibility he does not deserve and has not earned.
I would pay money to watch that happen, which is not a sentiment I ordinarily ever apply to anything Leto is in.
You're welcome!
For what it's worth, I'm a fairly casual Potter fan—came into the fandom comparatively late for someone my age—who usually enjoys reading scripts and didn't have expectations one way or another for the play, and I thought it was really uneven.
I honestly wish the script had just focused on him and Albus's friendship. I think it would have been a better story.
I found underwhelming, to put it mildly. It had some interesting moment, but the entire thing just seemed like such blatant fan service. I also thought the dialogue was pretty terrible.
I never was a Draco Malfoy fan, so I never thought I'd say this, but his kid was the best part of the Cursed Child script for me. He *was* adorable.
No, I thought Cursed Child was pretty mediocre and just rehashed stuff that we already knew. Fantastic Beasts at least looks like it will delve into something new.
He seems like a nice guy, but I don't find him attractive at all.
When I read some of those quotes, I immediately thought of the Hound's seminar on last words: "Come on, you can do better" and "You're shit at dying, you know that?"
Yes! He and Ian McShane both kept it together way longer than I ever would have.
I guess Ramsay's worse, but I find Dennis a lot more entertaining.
I loved how he kept stubbornly trying to say his lines as if the entire scene hadn't already gone to hell.
It really is such a great movie I watched it for the first time a year or so ago and had assumed it was just going to be a cheesy little adventure movie. It exceeded all of my expectations and then some.
Glad to see Southern Comfort mentioned. That movie is eerie as hell.
I am curious to gauge my reactions to the changes when I revisit the show, though honestly most of the changes I've encountered so far don't bother me. It would be difficult to transfer everything from the page to the screen, and as a general rule, I'm pretty okay with adaptations making changes, as long as I can…
I was sort of in your shoes a year ago. I was wrapping up a master's in English and only read literary theory and Capote—subject of my thesis.
I decided July was going to be ASOIAF month. I'd never read the Game of Thrones books before, despite liking the show, but I decided to give them a try after the latest season wrapped up.