Watching him and Norrell in the final episode, I couldn't help thinking that the show had gone full "Doctor Who."
Watching him and Norrell in the final episode, I couldn't help thinking that the show had gone full "Doctor Who."
In terms of explaining what was going on, though, it was an improvement over the book in some respects. The sequence leading up to Arabella's death was much more confusing in the original book because we see the moss-oak log taking Arabella's place without ever getting a clear sense of what happened to Arabella.
Don't cry for me! I'm already dead!
Warner Brothers just needs to quit.
"There, Selleck would use the water to nourish his avocado farm, as well
as moisturize the bristles of a mustache that might otherwise grow stiff
and unkempt in the unforgiving summer air."
It really is one of Welles' best movies, and that's saying something considering how in whatever genre he was working in - Shakespearean history, crime thriller, film noir, Victorian melodrama - he was always relentlessly watchable. In this case he's assisted somewhat by the film around him, which is positively…
I'd love to see a Goosebumps TV series on Netflix.
Let's Get Invisible was so creepy, in the same way the opening song from Muppet Treasure Island is scary as hell when you're 10 years old.
I read Piano Lessons Can Be Murder! a few weeks ago. It was a swift, fun read, and I enjoyed it except for the fact that literally every chapter would end with the kid hero hearing a noise and every next chapter would begin with him finding out it was his cat.
Glad to see Tom Hollander getting more attention. He was so great in Pirates of the Caribbean 3 and Pride and Prejudice.
On the day when we learn The Dissolve is closing, this might actually be true.
Breendan Gleeson's performance was truly stunning.
Oh, THE THING is better than Alien in almost every conceivable way.
Thus always to creeposauruses.
Well, THE THING is basically Aliens in the Arctic.
Well at least Chris Pratt will have work for the foreseeable future.
At least now when Ed went to Subway after being fired by Leslie Knope, we know what he was doing.
True Detective: Season 3.
I vote for "Look Beneath the Floorboards."
This scene was deeply affecting in the novel, one of the more bittersweet and tragic moments. In the series there simply wasn't enough time, and their relationship suffered as a result. Imagine if it had been a two-hour movie!