sajanas1
Sajanas1
sajanas1

Hmmmm needs more Tilda Swinton.

The fact that he played an amazing villain previously really helps early on when you’re not really sure if you trust him yet. You have the same suspicions that Reese has, and you grow to trust him just like Reese.

isn’t it creepy that Natalie Portman had more going chemistry wise with Hugo Weaving and Jean Reno in V for Vendetta and The Professional respectively than with Hayden? LOL

Buried somewhere in the special features on the DVD of Episode II was a section of a test reading with the two of them. They had the chemistry there, but it disappeared somewhere between casting and filming.

Funny story, I never watched Lost but Michael Emerson was so good on that show , apparently, and the character so permeated popular culture I honestly thought his name was Benjamin Linus when I started watching PoI.

I smell some pornographic fan fiction. . .

the best thing about it?

The problem started with aging down Anakin in the first episode - the early plan was for him to be a teenager. They should’ve casted someone with chemistry then. Oh, and acting ability too.

‘s why I’ve always preferred werewolves to vamps. No blood loss, and you can take em to the beach.

“...he told me you killed him!”

South Park can be fine in doses, but as a former fan (like most people back in my high school days, when the show first started airing, I thought it was this amazing, transgressive thing), I got really, really turned off at how so much of the point came to be to emptily poke at any sort of genuine, real-world social

Blame the writers who did that to Harry Kim; that is one of many reasons why Garrett Wang is no fan of some of the writers on that series.

Yeah, media has a way of prioritizing romantic relationships above all else, and it’s kinda ridiculous.

Hero-villain romances are hard to shake out. But man oh man, hero-villain sexual tension (that is not necessarily the intent of the writers)? Sign me up.

8) Characters form a pairing after one character endlessly pursuing the other even when they’ve been told the other is not interested, sometimes more than once. It’s not romantic, it’s stalkerish and creepy.

Don’t forget Heroes. For many of us who lasted to season 4 on a thin, thin shred of stubborn hope, the episode where Sylar and the Cheerleader hooked up for a hot makeout sesh after he broke into her community college was the last one we tuned in for.

That’s what I love about the ending of Big Trouble in Little China. Another film would have paired of Jack (Burton) and Gracie (Law) but not BTiLC. Jack leaves without even a goodbye kiss and drives of into the sunset...

Bah, Bashir and Garak 4eva!

There should be an honorable mention for the Self-Sacrificial Breakup. “I love you, but I just can’t stay.” izombie, Spider-Man, just about every Batman movie. Joss Whedon does this all the time.