q-hardy
Quarrelin' Hardy
q-hardy

This solves the whole "Who shot first, Han or Greedo?" debacle. Neither did, because Disney confiscated their blasters. The end.

His testimony in the earlier episodes is one of the things that actually tips Jessica off on Kilgrave being back anyway, since his story was believable as something Kilgrave would do. I never got the impression the show was ever really saying anything bad about him.

It wasn't, the red, white, and blue pills are just Nuke's shtick, and since he started out in the Daredevil books, and the Netflix shows are based on the street level characters, they probably just wanted to introduce him somewhere. And since he fits in with the theme of the show, and Daredevil season 2 is going to

You're still having someone interfering with your agency, taking control over you unwittingly, and being taken advantage of and stolen from. Yeah, it's not the worst outcome, but he was still a victim.

It sounds like a super hero crime fighter name, which it obviously is. Kilgrave sounds like a super hero villain name, which is obviously is. It should be OK for both to be used in the context of a super hero show.

I didn't really take that so much as a joke, but more of Jessica being dismissive of everyone else because she's kind of fuck-up.

I learned something today!

I was actually kind of annoyed they decided to make it a fake name. I mean, he is in the same show as a guy named Luke Cage.

Granted I have never been stabbed, but I would safely say trying to prevent it by grabbing the dangerous sharp part would probably be the last thing I would try.

I agree. A movie that sets out to do a specific thing and does so perfectly and flawlessly should be respected for that, no matter if its a serious drama or a crazy action film.

Stop criticizing my hiring policies, Kaz!

Metal Gear Solid V has a surprisingly small amount of cutscenes, and very few of them are longer than a couple minutes at most. It's actually kind of surprising.

I wouldn't expect Ant-Man to make the list, honestly. But it was really fun, and I'm definitely looking forward to it's sequel and seeing how Peyton Reed handles the characters on his own without having to play off Edgar Wright's prior ideas.

I don't have cable so I've only been able to catch a couple episodes of Ash vs. Evil Dead at a friends, and it's incredible. I'll need to get a hold of the series somehow once it's done.

Spotlight does deserve on the list. I may be biased, though, because I grew up in a community that was directly affected by the situation covered in the movie during the time it happened. I'm lucky, I happened to be going to a different church in the same town that one of those monsters was in, preying on kids.

I liked the pool scene because it actually felt like a dumb plan teenagers would come up with in real life.

Happy to see Crimson Peak and It Follows on this list! That's a nice surprise. I loved both movies and I don't think either gets enough love. Fury Road is an incredible film too, and it really surprises me to see it get so much love from critics at the year end. It's the type of movie I enjoy and never expect serious

Yeah, it was one of the things Del Toro let slip after the fact, as he seems to love talking about cool projects he'll never be able to finish, which drives me a little bonkers.

It's such a waste of great technology.

You pretty much keep playing Side Ops and occasionally additional story events happen.