Wow. How can I be so naive about online trolling in this day and age? I am sorry for the cluelessness of my earlier post.
Wow. How can I be so naive about online trolling in this day and age? I am sorry for the cluelessness of my earlier post.
The FBI of Hannibal must be in the same organizational chart of the FBI of Twin Peaks. I can imagine Jack taking a loud phone call from Gordon about the weather, and then not knowing if he is talking about a multiple homicide or not.
The murder magicians of Hannibal are a truly diverse lot. I know some scenes from Silence strike us as outmoded or insensitive, but it seems a curious objection to a show that is focused on a charmingly sophisticated psychopath who eats other people. I mean, doesn't the show get a massive charge from its misanthropy?
You know who could really put on a hell of a show? Hitler!
Lynch loves the long take until the original purpose of the scene just becomes unglued in limbo. It's like if Tarkovsky or Bela Tarr had a sense of humor. And he is also partial to the banality of conversations that revolve around first names of third party subjects. I'm sure it's all plot points, but I really get the…
Every time I see Ben at his desk i think he looks like David Letterman pre-retirement. His deep nostalgia for that bike was surprisingly affective. He did a lot of reflecting on past pleasures with Jerry in the original series, but here he seems just pleased he had a father that gave him something he really loved.
He and Sir Ian probably laugh over their Metamucil about how much more shit pays than Shakespeare. Good for them! Bad for the kids.
With owls playing ukuleles!
Spray paint A stencil of a girl walking into an emoji of smiling shit.
His every entrance should be followed by the haunting strains of Torgo's theme.
Have you been watching the series for long?
I am relieved you are giving a restrained thumbs up to the series. A lot rides on your digit.
She has a medieval version of one of those boxes Tom Cruise uses in the Mission Impossible movies.
GOT suddenly looks a lot less complicated and a lot more reassuring in the midst of this wildly alive snake pit of the Return.
I read about this game years ago and I completely forgot the woodcutters. Also I don't see any mention of Juergen Prochnow's character the woodsman that appeared in the cut scenes from FWWM. There is also a scene where Leland pretends he is a lumberjack with a Frankenstein like stiffness that sends Laura and Sarah…
All I can suggest is either a trip to the Hiroshima Dome Museum or look through photographs of the unlucky survivors to see what makes the atomic bombings special in the worst sense. and for its dire impact on future generations, I humbly suggest the film Black Rain by Shohei Imamura.
Finn is such an anonymous name for a character, unless it's preceded by something like Huckleberry. Alas there are no berries of any kind in the film, which is too often my complaint for this franchise.
I agree completely. Chuck has manifested his guilt in his sickness and almost broke through before losing it all over the heartbreak of the firm. Howard continued his stealth campaign to become a figure of integrity by writing a check from his own account, but that final company farewell was humiliating. Chuck kicking…
Iligetimate face-hugging does not result in chest birth. It's science.
Few moments of the season have matched the slapstick of Howard going through back yards in his immaculate suit. Yet in a moral scheme where the dark end is given the unmitigated brutality of Hector, Howards tact and slick manner is calming and almost benign. For some reason he reminds of Mitt Romney, not my first…