otherjimdonahue--disqus
OtherJimDonahue
otherjimdonahue--disqus

So he hasn't even started shooting yet? At this point, I predict he'll start describing it as 100 movies that will be injected into your brain but never quite get around to shooting a single scene.

Thank you! I was wondering if they were one and the same, and never got around to checking.

Adderall?

Is the whole season going to have long episodes? This was in a 90-minute slot, as is next week.

Ah, yeah, that's what he must have meant. China opening weekend, $44 million; U.S., $22 million.

"Now You Seem Me 2 grossed $43 million at the Chinese box office, nearly twice what it earned in the U.S."

No date announced yet—I wouldn't expect them before next year. (Note: There will be 12 episodes in the Netflix-funded season.)

Netflix has commissioned more (but what's there now is all there is so far—six regular episodes plus one extra-long Christmas episode).

When you're watching Fritz Lang's "The Woman in the Window," stop when Edward G. Robinson closes his eyes in his chair. (I looked it up, and it's at 1 hour, 36 minutes in.) The nonsensical "happy" ending that follows is hella dumb and not in keeping with everything that preceded it. I'd wager that's where the original

He's OK. I mean, Sandra Bee's and John Oliver's shows are better—but they're also only once a week and have the luxury of digging deeper. The first two segments of the show aren't as good as under Jon Stewart, but they are still usually worth watching.

"Playtime" is indeed amazing—listen to Wyatt and go rent it. And try to watch it on as big a TV as possible. It's the kind of movie that just won't work on a small screen.

"Jesus Wept" is a terrific album. "Downtown Venus" deserved to be a hit.

I saw this at an ill-advised Saturday afternoon matinee when I was 11 in 1973.

I was halfway through watching the second episode via my cable's on-demand service, which forces you to watch commercials on some programming (I assume it's up to the network), including this show. Actually, not only can you not fast forward through the ads, but the same goes for the program itself. Well, the cable

If I'm reading this right (it's not well worded) Amazon Prime will be posting season 2 "Mr. Robot" episodes shortly after they air. It's unusual for Amazon, but it has done it before, with that Halle Berry series. http://www.techradar.com/us…

"Because of the proximity to New York City, the producers had access to theater and indie film stars who could ferry over for an episode or an arc."

Hey, is that Tasmin Greig of "Black Books" sitting next to him? Sure looks like her. Funny, funny show. (It's on Netflix.)

I blame Steev Mike.

"Relativity is expecting to bring in a badly needed $200 million with these two films…"

Awkward.