mynameisbleurgh--disqus
bleurgh
mynameisbleurgh--disqus

I think the film was trying to convey that he made the choice out of sympathy and really wanting Doug to realise his dream, but honestly I think he did it for purely selfish financial reasons and because of his ego.

SPOILERS

The movie really sold me on visiting camp 4 and not summiting. Getting to the summit seems to be the most dangerous part and yet it's fundamentally underwhelming. In fact the only thing that seems to motivate people to do it is a desire for completion and the peer pressure of the other climbers.

SPOILERS

I think it was conceptually good, but botched in execution.

If this were truly a regular occurence I can see whole communities getting together to protect one another during the purge under the condition that they don't kill their own and capture anyone who does then going to loot neighbouring suburbs or cities.

The ending is the only part of Iron Man 2 I actually like.

Not in my generation or part of the world buddy. Maybe in yours.

Like Fry? Like Fry?

He visits Skaro at the start of the episode, before visiting the Asylum planet or the Dalek Parliament.

Exactly, a fleet always survives somehow.

What kind of sonic do you think suits 12's aesthetic? Im thinking some kind of solid black minimalistic sort of thing.

Or blowing up a certain planet and starting the largest war in the history of the universe?

I think they're as good at current affairs style journalism as anyone else. The problem with Vice News is the justifiably poor reputation of the shitty shitty shitty magazine and online publication they were birthed from.

The Justin Long, ultra low budget parody movie was the best one. Tat's not saying much though.

Fabio?

I'd even rate Jeremy over Joe, but Joe has that deep spiritual bro thing going on, which I think a lot of women fall for.

I like Woo, mostly because he knows how to shut up and doesn't feel compelled to do things all the time, risking doing something to alienate his tribe-mates. If only Vytas could have been more Woo-like.

Entire History is great, largely because it's so divisive as well as being interesting. The avclub writeup of that episode is worth reading for the discussions in the comments section alone.

I love 15 million merits, but I've always been a fan of dystopic speculative fiction and always hated reality talent shows, so a story that combines both and manages to tell a really thematically interesting story about the futility of non-conformity and how the system always wins and crushes any humanity a person