rogue-jyn-tonic
Rogue-Jyn-Tonic
rogue-jyn-tonic

I have no beef with Halle, nor do I take issue with what she has to say...but why the hell would any of us listen to what a celebrity has to say on this issue? Listen to your fucking doctor. Celebrities are not indicators of real life. Of course Halle Berry’s advice isn’t bad, but she can’t relate at all. In her

What don’t you like about the buzzer? I’m puzzled by this,

The British version will have a few differences from the original version. Instead of starting all responses with “What is”, you just say the answer followed by “innit?” Failure to do this will result in disqualification.

Oh man, US version rendered instantly obsolete. Which is fine by me because I haven’t watched a second since Alex passed.  I still don’t like the buzzer and am bored by the wagering, but more questions will be nice.

Wonder Woman is one of DC’s Big Three...and the most famous female superhero on Earth. Yet, all we’ve gotten is a 70s TV show and two movies.

The Basil Poledouris soundtrack deserves its own slideshow, but it at least deserved a shout out in the introduction.

I love the movie and always have, but I think the one weakness is the casting of Jeroen Krabbe as the revealed villain. It ought to be a shock, but in the words of Film Critic Bill Murray, “We Don’t Like Foreigners.” Imagine the role being played by a vaguely recognizable American character actor - like David

It’s the only Oscar nomination he’s ever had, which certainly says something. Though I think his follow-up in The Mosquito Coast was even better. Peter Weir seems to have a real knack for getting performances out of actors that you’d never expect from their prior work, like in Dead Poets Society and The Truman Show

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Incidentally, I always thought her best cover was actually of Elton John’s “Sacrifice”, which is just gorgeous and wonderful display of her power and control of her voice. She infuses Bernie Taupin’s lyrics about the fallout of a broken marriage with so much more emotion than Elton did as she goes from barely above a

I do have to call some bullshit on the claim of not watching any of the show, because the whole scene of Kimble running into Gerard while talking to a red herring one-armed man in jail is taken directly from an episode (and was especially memorable as the first time they’d come face to face).

Shocking news.  I’m sure the reissues and new compilation albums are already in the works.

Incoming hot take: The Witness was Harrison Ford’s best performance.

“Mr. Davis, how would you have handled the love scene in which old, fat Steven is lowered like a drawbridge onto a poor actress?”

Much appreciated.

In specifically regarding who reigns over King’s Landing in the end, numerous people of the show have gone on record saying that’s what GRRM has said his endgame is. And that by itself dictates other certainties.

Thanks.

From what was said at the time, yes. It’s all GRRM’s outlines. Now whether he goes back and changes it for the book because of public backlash to the TV show (lmao at him actually finishing the books), remains to be seen. But what happened in the TV show is largely the destination GRRM was going to arrive at.

Even if they are bullet points (for 6-8), other than the fine points of HOW things play out, are they consistent with what GRRM will do in the books? Are the main points of the show the same as what GRRM intends to happen in the books?

Well said.