mwnichols15
Other Tall Guy
mwnichols15

Decent promo. I'm for anything that gets people listening to the New York Dolls.

There's a lot of fallout in this episode from this season's shifting moralities. It's the end of the season, so those dominoes have to start falling, I guess.

Not a bad episode for the series to go out on, if indeed it is the end.

That'd require them to hold two conflicting thoughts in their head at the same time.

JLI.
Nextwave.
Quantum and Woody.
Hell, the DnA Guardians of the Galaxy, which formed the bedrock of the movie that made a zillion dollars.
Morrison and Millar teaming up for Aztek, the Ultimate Man and the universe not suffering total protonic reversal.

Your friend's got a point. At its heart, it's a story about a boy and his dad (and all sorts of cool Art Deco science, but still). Pretty much a guaranteed tearjerker for most guys.

Most definitely. JLA is just the perfect amount of Morrison: weird and interesting, but not crazy for crazy's sake. And he spends a lot of time very quietly examining the relationships between members, which gets lost in a lot of group books.

Morrison and Porter's JLA. Big, bright, full of spectacle and insight into the characters. Not just what they do, but who they are, and how they act around each other.

Pfft. No apologies needed. Just two people talking shop about a show they both like.

I completely agree with that thought.

I love how spare the writing is at times: these are characters we're very familiar with (who are also very familiar with each other) so there's not a whole lot of dead-weight exposition. They act the way people who've known each other for a long time would. The writers and directors let the cast tell the story with

What a fun read! We don't always get actors as candid (about their performances, about their history, about their costars) as Siddig.

Banshee minus the violence, swearing, nudity, Amish, or anything remotely interesting?

Glad we could all be here to witness one of Joe's rare, fleeting moments of self-awareness. And it was especially nice to see Sara as something other than as a wet blanket—as someone who can see right through Joe's Bateman Lite bullshit and call him on it.

Most of these characters have stopped asking the question, "If I do this, how will it affect (person I'm supposed to care about deeply)?"

Watching the Donna/Gordon arc this season is so massively uncomfortable (and yet, such a great portrayal).

Really? NOTHING from Justified's best season? Come on, guys.

Today's word was secrets: Joe's keeping them from Sara and her father, Gordon's keeping them from Donna, Donna's keeping them from Gordon and Cameron, Cameron's keeping them from the guys at Mutiny (about Tom, I mean).

Highlander, with either James McAvoy or Ewan McGregor as MacLeod, Antonio Banderas as Ramirez, and Batista as the Kurrgan.

Absolutely. Snafu was Sledge's personal guide through hell and back, and Malek was equal parts dark, reptilian, and hopeful.