Yep, working on it now. Had to cover the theme park thing first.
Yep, working on it now. Had to cover the theme park thing first.
It's completely ugly, but if you look up close, it's also actually all the characters from Inside Out. So I'm into it.
Thanks!
That's always my go-to example for movies that don't deserve to be as great as they are. Everything about it - the premise, the cast, the trailers - suggested it would be awful, but it turns out to be both funny as hell, and a pretty damn good Star Trek movie.
Dumb mistake, thank you for pointing it out.
Oh man, I didn't even think of that. That would be freaking fantastic.
This is my pet theme, so I'll just point out that this is another episode (the third, by my count, this season), of Todd pretending to be someone he's not, out of a temporary desire to make his life more fun or interesting. Something something, microcosm, macrocosm, Bojack's efforts to improve his life.
I probably didn't explain myself as well as I could. I really like The Muppets (2011), but it feels very much like a kid's movie, with friendship and good intentions triumphant. The adulation for the sheer joy of Muppetness left the characters feeling a little flat for me. This feels much more… grounded, without…
Should have something up about that in a bit.
Thanks for pointing out the mistake. It should be fixed in a minute.
I really like the way the show uses Todd's super-simple desires and needs to reflect the bigger themes the season is working toward. If the first season was about recognizing the need for change, season two is about the difference between the easy, temporary allure of trying to be some other, better person, and the…
Yeah, I honestly didn't mean that as a criticism, just a reference to the fact that he gave out a lot of No-Prizes.
There's a third Goldberg. Which is… super confusing, given that Adam F. Goldberg worked on Community.
Thanks for pointing out the mistake! It's been fixed. That's what I get for only checking that the character exists, not that she's the one I'm actually talking about.
According to the clip, it's literally an old Star Wars blanket he had tailored into a tuxedo jacket. So… Yup!
The trick is the cheese caramelized on the crust!
It does, in that the main character is a werewolf named Scott whose best friend is named Styles. Beyond that… not really.
Look, I don't want to get into a religious argument in the comments section of an article about Teen Wolf. It's just not the place for it.
I hold that just because he didn't do it on screen, it doesn't mean he COULDN'T, if he really wanted to. It's one of my core beliefs.