It's a symptom of the brittle bone disease they have apparently decided causes his condition.
It's a symptom of the brittle bone disease they have apparently decided causes his condition.
yes, I wondered how he found out what they were saying about him.
I love them both.
I don't think we heard anything about Lagertha after the battle.
yeah, I thought that scene was really tedious.
Rasputin was, too.
There's a lot of things to like about this movie, but a few I had real issues with. Spoilers ahead.
I thought the World War II story was hinting that the Americans had eaten the Germans. No?
Spoiler: depending on how many of the books they end up doing, we'll see that.
I do, too.
I'm not. I really preferred the way the book handled it, particularly because it showed how sexual pregnancy can be.
The McQuarry character reminded me a lot of the head of the Black Watch in GoT.
Agreed. She tells him, there's a pause, he swallows, he comforts her, and then he sits down and looks totally crushed.
Funny, I love book two and I thought book three was too far out there.
My recollection is that it's also strategically located.
I'm with you. I would rather that they had merged this week's episode with last week's, giving us another hour on Wentworth-and-aftermath.
My boyfriend calls this movie "a chick flick with whips."
omg. I worked in that exact office in the early 1980s.
I like the theory that the Mets pennant symbolizes that, like the Mets that won the World Series that year, Don will hit another home run.
I hate to be ignorant, but I don't get it. Could someone explain?