ryanlohner
rmlohner
ryanlohner

It’s so rare to get a movie where the entire theater experience, with the screen filling your whole field of vision, and the sound coming from different areas and occasionally blasting you into your seat, is such an important part of the storytelling. So these movies absolutely deserve this.

This article’s refusal to acknowledge the existence of Life Stinks amuses me.

I wasn’t considering him as a suspect at all, but his making such a big deal about it actually does make me wonder.

I’m a huge fan of the Shogun novel, and the way I like to describe it to newbies is “Imagine if Mr. Bean was dropped into the middle of Game of Thrones.” All these huge political power players making moves against each other, most of them after years of setup, and suddenly this one dumbass stumbles into the middle of

James Woods’ agent famously turned down the role of Mr. Orange in Reservoir Dogs, which Tarantino had specifically written for him, without telling him anything about it. Once Woods found out, he was quickly out of a job.

He’s one of the best parts of the show, and actually made me happy to see Zhao every time. The character is still written as a total cardboard villain, but Leung gives him so much more personality just with his facial expressions and body language. It’s a real shame he has to leave the show here.

The very first book implies that there are humans around somewhere, and includes a real world-proportioned cat. After that, it just became a pure human-less fantasy world.

This is one of those times where I suddenly wonder if he was always this guy and I was just too stupid to notice. See also: John Campea’s relentless sucking of David Zaslav’s dick.

One thing that struck me watching the show is that earthbending is the real bane of a live action version of this franchise, since unlike the other elements, the effects of it have to stick around after the bending is done. You can really feel them straining at times with that, but never enough to actually take me out

After so much freaking out from the fans about every single word the production crew said about the show, I tried a crazy idea called actually watching the show for myself before deciding what I think about it, and what do you know, I liked it a lot. I especially have to shout out Ken Leung, who brings a metric ton

Can’t forget Demolition Man.

Extraordinary Attorney Woo is another great one. And speaking as someone with autism, it’s great representation.

Candyman.

Beetlejuice.

when the story is clearly borrowing from myths and folklore from a particular part of the world, perhaps the casting could have been more diverse.”

Most audience members were surprised by the ending, which set up a continuation of the story.”

They’ve already announced they’re recasting Kang, and it’s looking like Coleman Domingo.

I’ve never once heard of this guy before, if that helps him feel less hated.

Super confident prediction: the movie is completely vague about which party the President belongs to, and whether either side is right wing or left wing, so it can wrap up with a pat moral that it never mattered what side anyone was on because they’re both equally bad, and Garland swans off like he made some big

Plus his childhood was straight out of a Charles Dickens story.