reflecto
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I see Takei's point, but I don't agree with him on Sulu. Whatever his internal process, I don't feel this invalidates anything canonical we saw of the character.

But I don't think he played Sulu str8. I thought he just played Sulu.

I get what he's saying, but I just don't remember Sulu being demonstrated as overtly heterosexual that often. I take no offense.

I'm so happy for my little show.

Worth a watch.

And One from the Heart is a better movie than Heaven's Gate. Yeah, I said it.

Oh God! Revolution! I was done five minutes in with Al Pacino's horrific accent, fighting with Annie Lennox on the docks. "No! Don't take my boat!"

And he was right.

They weren't wrong about her not delivering box office a la Jane Fonda or other possible choices, but they were wrong about her and I think Bach admits it in the book. When so much else about the film fails, Huppert works.

I agree with all of this except Huppert. I think she works against all odds.

It is a beautiful movie, with some wonderful sequences. That doesn't make it great. A third of the way through Cimino's preferred cut is when it begins to collapse for me, the final hour is all but intolerable, and the endless sequences of the howling villager stereotypes make the immigrant mice from An American Tail

"Ask Clint!"

A year later, I would like to say I totally missed Shirley getting sick being a result of her brief bit in the mammoth shed.

THIS SHOW IS APESHIT

^amateur hour

Oh, they definitely all know. Tyrion knows too, I believe. But what I'm talking about are the Houses in Westeros and the South still under Cersei and King's Landing's sway. Who among them know just how desperate her situation is and are willing to go up against the Mad Queen who has wildfyre?

But who left in KL/Westeros knows Cersei and the Lannisters are broke?

Yeah, I entertained that thought for a few minutes afterwards sadly. 'Maybe she's just under some rubble! Last of her House!' No.

Oh God. I didn't even know Nabin did 30 Rock reviews.

I don't think Cersei would ever plot her son's death. She kept him away in an attempt to save him. But her resignation when viewing his body - and her armor which she wore all day long - indicates to me that Cersei had given herself over to the prophecy she'd always dreaded and accepted it quickly despite her hope to