The only good Lannister is a dead Lannister.
The only good Lannister is a dead Lannister.
Haha, get fucked, Lannisters! The show never had the budget to show Robb’s victories early on, so it was very satisfying to see the Lannister armies finally get the shit kicked out of them, particularly after several episodes of rather contrived plot gifts for Cersei and co. Too bad Cersei wasn’t there to be…
Highly unlikely, particularly since that would result in far fewer women winning in the long-term.
It's a wig now.
Valyrian steel plot armour.
Isn't the only thing the Greyjoys are good at fucking up?
"Pretty well. We take a huge bailout and then funnel the money into political parties bent on dismantling any meagre regulations imposed on us."
"I was chased away, sold, raped…"
Yes, that's why Jon left, but why does anyone who didn't witness his resurrection think he left? Why are they okay with it?
His latest monologue was the biggest collection of nonsense I've heard since anything Varga said on Fargo.
I feel bad for Isaac Hempstead-Wright. He hasn’t had a scene with another main castmember since crossing paths with Sam and Gilly at the end of Season 3 (and even that was a one-off), and now that Bran is finally reuniting with the Stark family et al. his character has been retooled (offscreen) as largely emotionless…
And the Felix Leiter from one of Moore's movies comes back in License to Kill to tell his wife how Dalton Bond was married to Tracy, at that.
I have a hard time viewing Bond's life as basically meaningless. He saves the world frequently; that surely counts for something.
You could as easily argue that this movie sets up the series for everything that's wrong with Quantum of Solace.
This movie kicked so much ass.
The Bond franchise seems to exist in a constant state of flux between grit and camp, depending on the reaction to preceding films. This is as hard as they ever swung in the way of grit. Craig was great for this version of Bond, but when they tried to reintegrate more of the established Bond characters, setpieces,…
Why does bringing Dench back not make sense? This isn't meant to be a prequel to the other films, it's a reboot.
Fury Road had all of those things.
I wouldn't say there's anything particularly gory or anything here. Lots of hard knocks, mainly.
His stated purpose for going to Westeros was to get ships.