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rbanner1989

She did. That’s the premise of the article.

First of all - MORE POWER TO ARTISTS AND THEIR UNFILTERED VISIONS.

I accidentally read a very succinct synopsis of Twin Peaks before seeing it, so when I saw the first season (I got it for Christmas in 2006, having seen it mentioned in umpteen ‘If you like Lost, check out...’ pieces) I loved the fact that all this spiritual stuff was happening in the background and only being

I love the Harry Potter books - I read the first one during its 2nd print run in 1997 or 8, just when word-of-mouth stories about it were earning brief reports on BBC radio or CBBC Newsround. Save The Order of the Phoenix (which came out when I was a sullen 14 year old, and capable of buying the book but waiting a

I was born in the late 80s, and have an immense amount of primeval affection for the aesthetic sense I remember being surrounded by until the end of the 90s - video cassette covers, billboards, Blockbuster posters, book covers: they were all influenced by that fun, fantastical,

The good commenter is in the lodge, and he can’t leave. Post it in your disqus.

(Unfurls medieval Kinja manual. It is covered in cobwebs; a bloody handprint is smeared down the cover.)

That guy had two moments that suggested some redeeming qualities: he took Fry under his wing (even though, as an ‘80s guy, befriending him meant for two dollars he’d beat him with a pool cue until his retinas detached) and he paid Zoidberg a nice compliment (‘Gutsy question - you’re a shark.’)

So no specifics, and a vague description which amounts to ‘I don’t like him for a petty reason, but I’ll dress it up in right on language to make it seem profound.’

Through the course of six seasons, the camera has gleefully lingered on a pre-teen being burnt alive by her parents, the only fun-having man in King’s Landing getting his skull popped like a piece of bubble wrap, a pregnant woman and her baby getting stabbed to death, and a man getting his head burnt up by liquid

I loved Alan Wake’s atmosphere and gameplay, but I really disliked the story. Everything about the concept of the Dark Presence - its plan, its weaknesses, its name - is dumb, as though the writers smooshed BOB and the Smoke Monster together while removing all the characteristics that made Twin Peaks and Lost’s

To be fair, Battlefront was developed so that it could work on PS2, Xbox, and PC with minimal differences between them, so it was developed with the PS2’s limitations in mind.

Because American youth are ignorant about the world present, let alone the world historical? Go ahead, ask an American teen if they get the joke.

Couldn't agree more. Every single aspect of it is completley counter to the themes, aesthetic,s and atmosphere that makes The Lord of the Rings what it is.

I've never understood people who take issue with Ripley's going back for the cat, and would guess that it's all from people who've never owned a pet. There's nothing stupid or weak about risking one's life for an animal, and it's certainly not a plot hole.

The GTA series was conceived, and has been developed from the off, in Scotland; it's not outsourced there for tax breaks or anything like that.

Everyone I know who's seen the Dark Knight loved it or 'really liked it even though I'm not a fan of superheroes', the acclaim for it is no internet conspiracy.

It's a family show weighted towards children. Do you guys insisting that no way is it a children's show remember what kind of stuff you liked, watched and read as kids? Star Wars, which most kids see before they're 5 or 6, has tonnes of death, several instances of on-screen mutilation, emotionally disturbing