norwoodeye
Steve N
norwoodeye

You can also view it in list form, at least on your phone (not sure about a desk top).

Why would Lightyear make 90% of the population comfortable?

I love that they’re finally giving Angela Sarafyan something more to do. More cold corporate-speak spouting assassin please.

I think the Police’s main objective was to get Busy. 

Yes.

If you think this reads like disdain you should read the TVLine review! If anything, having seen the pilot for this a while back, I think the reviewer was pretty generous. It truly plays as if the Parks & Rec team got a huge budget to film one of the Burt Macklin stories scripted by Andy Dwyer.

Video games are great. “Gamers” are fucking trash. Makes me embarrassed to admit I love video games sometimes. 

Nice, but why are all your articles also Guardian articles?

To be clear, I also have enjoyed a great many MCU productions. For me, though, it’s now moving into diminishing returns. The deeper the IP lore and synergy goes the less I care.

Cha Cha Real Smooth and The Peanut Butter Falcon would be much better choices if you actually want to see her act well in good movies.

I think they do this shit on purpose to piss me off

Auto-correct is cheaper than copy-editing.

...”paper view”? Really?

I’m sure I could reasonably be called a “hater”, but the longer the MCU has been around the less interesting or good I have found ALL of it. Because at its heart it is the same narrative beats that we’ve had forever, just with a slightly different “skin”. So while I agree that Marvel’s willingness to spread its

Hey Hattie, Soon-Yi Previn is the adopted daughter of actress Mia Farrow and musician André Previn. “Zero Gravity” is not Allen’s memoir, but rather a collection of fictional stories. His memoir is his previous book entitled “Apropos of Nothing.” Even though you and your readers do not like Allen, as a journalist you

The whole thing is a good reminder not to judge actors too much by the early roles that made them prominent. Actors take on roles for lots of reasons, particularly early in their careers. It could be because they love and identify with the character, or because it’s a stepping stone to something else.

Thanks, I teach this topic and know how tricky it can be - in fact, I often use Pulp Fiction as the starting point of the “rebirth” of American indie, to help orient students, only to then undermine the point by going back to Jarmusch then Casavettes then Shirley Clarke, etc., but also by questioning Pulp Fiction’s