Ironic for a spin-off of a show that portrays an America in which there are like 24 new, hyper-inventive, super dangerous serial-killers every year.
Ironic for a spin-off of a show that portrays an America in which there are like 24 new, hyper-inventive, super dangerous serial-killers every year.
Tywin was too cool almost. Like I actually generally liked him, even whilst knowing that he might be the most evil of them all. Charles Dance's charisma, I guess.
Shit, I have a year left…
Well, I can't argue with that
Well, arguably, in the US at least, 'The Fifties' was the period from 1946 until the Kennedy Assassination, which would make '62 the twilight of 'the 50s' (which is present in the movie's end-of-an-era vibe).
Oh, and for the record, there was an episode of Happy Days where a guy literally jumped over a shark, and it was the BEST ONE!
Everyone knows 'chest' rhymes with 'sick'.
The more I found out about Saville, the sicker I felt. The way that they didn't just turn a blind eye but actually gave him access to children is just horrifying.
Didn't ruin the band, but the 0.3 review of The Boy With The Arab Strap is one that struck me as being outrageously petty (it's obviously been consigned to the site's memory hole, but it exists in archive form…)
Charlotte Sometimes watches these with me on Inbetween Days.
Yeah, this could work.
What if Jery get dire wolf?
Right?! I saw them in a converted church in Manchester and it was just a phenomenal experience. It didn't matter how early or late any of those present had discovered the band - they were all there to have a great time. Everyone just seemed to look so bloody happy that the band had come over to the UK and they'd been…
Yeah, there was reverent silence for songs such as 'Oh Comley' (the only slightly cringy moment was the crowd shouting the 'holy shit' bit from the background at the end of the studio recording…)
I felt like a bit of a poseur when I saw them live, because I love them but they played a bunch of obscure solo-era tracks that I'd never heard and people around me were singing along.
I wish I'd seen 'Slapped Actress' live, it's one of my favourite THS songs. That said, the gig I went to they opened with 'Ask Her For Adderall' and closed the main set with 'How a Resurrection Really Feels' so I can't complain
A Feast For Crows may be one of the strongest books because of the Brienne chapters. I feel like some of the most important writing of the series is in those sections, and they certainly contain the core of the themes on war and class that often get overshadowed by the big deaths and whatnot.
Yeah, I watched that movie before I was aware of Woody's past and I found it shady as heck. It's also generally not a particularly strong film, cinematography aside. The story is standard mid-life crisis bollocks and the jokes are nowhere near as good as Annie Hall.
The Hammerhead made me appreciate the Mako, as at least you conceivably could last out a fight in the Mako.
That said, wasn't the Pripyat level generally considered one of the best parts of Modern Warfare?