That time disjunction works both from a sleep and accident perspective, in the sense that one can slip into both without conscious awareness, only to have that awareness abruptly return afterward.
That time disjunction works both from a sleep and accident perspective, in the sense that one can slip into both without conscious awareness, only to have that awareness abruptly return afterward.
It seemed to me the pill switching was less about poisoning his boss than depriving him of his life-saving medication, and just about any benign powdered substance would have done the trick.
Our esteemed reviewer has brought this up before but this episode especially seemed to be the pride episode that goes before whatever terrible fall the showrunners have in store for the finale.
I just assumed you made up that full quote to exaggerate Edelstein's skeeziness, but holy-hide-you-your-young-daughters-batman this guy is for real.
http://www.slate.com/articl…
I'm looking forward to how he'll spin "fish out of water" when the new Aquaman movie comes out.
If he gave up his practice I wouldn't care one way or another, but he apparently still cuts into patients despite spending large portions of his time shilling himself and his products rather than maintaining his surgical skills.
Unlike the previous FJ about the Swedish WWII hero which you either knew or you didn't, this one could not only be worked out but had such an obvious hint in it that it seemed like a gimme once you figured out "the god equivalent to Mars."
That's a fantastic analogy.
If you weren't already aware film critic Molly Haskell recently came out with her very appreciative Steven Spielberg: A Life in Films which itself was a springboard for David Denby's own ruminations on Spielberg's varied career.
http://www.newyorker.com/ma…
She is a Tripplehorn after all, while Sharon is only the one Stone.
"It's cynical porn, trying to identify with that "outlaw" mentality but merely delivering mindless and in this case right-wing fascist crap
content. It's as if the critics' overheated criticism of Don Siegel/Clint Eastwood's classic "Dirty Harry" when it was released was a red flag waved in front of Stanley (though…
Duke
Only Sarah was correct on FJ but for some reason only bet $1,000, not
enough to pass Bala (Sarah was locking down second place, maybe?).
For the last five complete seasons:
Forgot about that.
Bala hitting the last DD on the penultimate clue of the DJ round in the second row of a straightforward category with enough money to guarantee the runaway was a gift and an all-in gimme, and he squandered it.
MASSACRE ON AISLE 12
The problem, though, is that frontal nudity for men differs compared to women since most men, at least those not tucking, would have their genitalia exposed while most women would not, though of course the latter being highly dependent on foliage and individual anatomy.
The evil doctor did get a pass, especially compared to Danny Huston's evil German general, but I don't think we saw her directly kill anyone onscreen, aside from maybe that first test subject the first time we see her.
Granted her gas did kill all the villagers that Diana had previously saved, but one could argue she…
They didstick David Thewlis' head onto a buff bod in that one flashback, and in the dramatization of Hippolyta's story we never see his face.
They probably kept Thewlis' face in full Ares mode to keep things consistent and simple, and while he might not have the face we normally associate with a Greek god, he was able…