ahhhhhh that's still driving me crazy.
ahhhhhh that's still driving me crazy.
Kimmel said today that the show was supposed to end with a final bit of him sitting in the audience with Damon, so that might have been it.
Matt Damon
In the episode "An Inside Man"; when Ezra and Kanan infiltrated an Imperial factory, Kallus revealed himself to them and helped them escape.
I don't know that it's so common that it's not kind of wild that the person they not only named the pet but also the movie after happened to be in a pet-driven action movie (really? are there that many of these? It's not like this is the Aristocats or something, either) so recently.
I don't know, it reads to me like "we want to have her as a card to potentially play in the future." Even by Disney standards there are ways to clearly kill off a character… as happened in this episode.
I guess, but I have to say that really threw me, as in my experience bambino/a can really stretch to any child short of tweenhood, maybe. "Child" would have been much more accurate translation of that word than "newborn."
I was sort of mixed on the movie Cloud Atlas, but now that I'm reading the book I kind of haaate it. But if we're being fair it's because my conclusion upon watching the movie was that they should have made some major changes which could have helped the story work better on screen, but they're adapting a book, I get…
I keep seeing people bring this up, but all the problems I had with Elementary were exactly the problems I thought I'd have with it - it did pretty much stick to the quirky man, straight-laced woman formula (I'm not saying it was bad for that, but it's certainly not original anymore); it was pretty much a weekly crime…
It's also in and of itself an issue that roles are disproportionately written for younger women (not the case for men!), and that older male characters are written with younger female love interests. This possibility (as frankly as unlikely as it is) could make this less a case of "these individuals are sexist," but…
I guessed Havana right away, but did sort of entertain NYC for a minute. But the Bronx is definitely on the mainland, and "attached" here may have also been meant to disqualify any man made attachments, in any case.
Post-Nausicaa, I would say Ghibli movies actually tend to be on the better end of dubbing, because Miyazaki had more leverage to ensure American distributors didn't edit the scripts. With the exception of the newer dub of My Neighbor Totoro, I haven't found the celebrity casting to be particularly distracting, though…
My personal favorite is actually My Neighbor Totoro. It's more oriented to child audiences than something like Princess Mononoke, and it's not as outright fantastical as Spirited Away, but I like that the drama of the story itself is intensely personal and practical. There are no real antagonists, the conflict is…
I thought it was pretty apparent, going back to their conversation in "Walter Taffet," that Aderholdt suspected something may have been going on with Nina and Stan. He listened to Stan talk about how Nina was such a good, straightforward person and answered immediately with stories of his own KGB asset admiring the…
They're not actually mutually exclusive. You can be calculated and conniving but believe you're doing it for an overall good purpose.
Very late but - the liquor stores are also concerned that if alcohol can be sold on Sunday, people will just buy it at grocery stores. Because apparently most people do their grocery shopping for the week on Sundays, and so will already be there, I guess.
I did guess it, but because I only read these recaps and just give myself until the time I'm done reading to come up with an answer, I forgot to read the category name and El Al was the only Israeli company I could think of at that moment.
I have to say, I've been able to sit through anything Hannibal has thrown at me, short of the first scene in 2x02. Including its most comparable death scene here. But when this came up I was all NOPE and looked away, and just hearing it still fucked me up. Ugh.
Also in "Kaiseki" you see him chewing on a pen while listening to Will and Alana talk, which Esparza said is a direct reference to Heald.
I got it right away too, but I think it was a combination of it starting with an 'a' (I think of states alphabetically), and once I'd thought of it, it having so few distinct letters. But I did also move my fingers as though typing to check.