How rude!
How rude!
They could incorporate his scene from The Divine Comedy.
I'm more surprised that someone still watches The Simpsons.
what have I told you about yeppers
Josh Holloway would've been great playing Woody Harrelson's character in The Hunger Games.
I actually enjoyed this; it was quite helpful.
Because he has the Dreamworks face.
also, that no one listens to the wise warnings of aging writers who alone possess the ability to see how badly gays are ruining our country.
Same here - the moment I saw the picture, I wondered if he was behind this. It's good to have ol' Rabin back at the AV Club.
Oddly enough, the ending was one aspect of the movie that didn't bother me at all. I'm a fan of stories where people have to choose nobility over each other - like in Casablanca. The movie reminded me quite a bit of Before Sunrise, though I wasn't as moved by it as I have been by some other romances from that period.
It's inconsistent. Some of the stories are really good. A few of them feel like they were just tossed off. I wouldn't call any of them bad, though; they're all worth reading.
The parts of Chimes of Midnight that I've seen were mesmerizing. I may check it out this week. A few days ago I watched Branagh's Much Ado about Nothing, and it's worth watching but I feel it's been surpassed by Whedon's version. Welles' literary adaptations are always striking, though, even when they fail.
This week I saw a kickass li’l movie called Fury Road.
This isn't wavy-gravy at all.
The Thing from John Carpenter's The Thing.
“But… there is, unseen by most, an underworld, a place that is just as real, but not as brightly lit.” I am simultaneously appalled and delighted that this happened.
Oddly enough, no - but Breaking Bad was an influence on my decision to watch The Caine Mutiny last week, and to re-watch The Searchers this week. I watched Bad Day at Black Rock because I read that the movie tackles issues of scapegoating and communal violence, and plus I just love Spencer Tracy.
In the past week I've seen about half the Marvel movies, the first
season of Agent Carter, The Railway Children (1970), Safety
Not Guaranteed, Bunny Lake Is Missing, Spielberg's War of the Worlds,
Kill Your Darlings (with Daniel Radcliffe as Allen Ginsberg), Errol
Flynn's Adventures of Robin Hood, Indiana Jones and…
But doesn't Dany eventually marry Jack Sparrow?
Agent Carter is one of today's most bingeable shows. I feel like it would be better served on Netflix.