sodasandfries--disqus
Sodas and Fries
sodasandfries--disqus

I wouldn't say people don't appreciate them, just that maybe they're taken a bit for granted?

Yeah hello I was talking about Lynch. Lynch =/= a fictional character.
It makes the character a misogynist and sick person, sure. But there is an immense gulf between portraying a terrible character doing terrible things, and a director glorifying an act. People kneejerked that Miriam had been killed off even though

~um yeah he directed Se7en and that Alien movie where everyone was bald right~

There's a credited picture of her in the review above, plus a small paragraph on her character following it.

I thought he would have returned about 5 episodes ago by now, so I'm not going to put a timestamp to it. But it'll happen.

Due to the fact that most of Dougie's story revolves around him awakening remnants of his Cooper persona, not to mention the crux of the FBI thread being them searching for him, on top of how they've been teasing the potential of more seasons and other spoilery things I won't mention, it all feels so explicit that I'd

Cooper is coming back. Anyone that says otherwise is just being over the top.

Her chair being backless is what makes her vulnerable. It's a good analogy for her position within the group - being above everyone's radar is how she perceives herself, while the truth is that a good number of people around the table already see her from all angles.

Is she evil, though?

I've been super impressed by Dana in this revival. It may even make me retroactively like him in the original series.

Even when they sit together in Mackley’s office, Diane perches on a stool high above her former colleagues. They sit solidly on the ground while Diane looms above them on her spindly, backless seat. Her position gives her a good vantage point for surveying the group, but it also makes her look vulnerable.

Keith David as Thunderball

nah, it's fine

Yup, Mr. Fixit. I've been waiting for a big screen Professor Hulk, personally.

It was a Marvel Studios joint

Okay yeah, I can see the pulpy factor. Just the way it came about in the comics was a bit ridiculous (how to fix a problem like our friend the Hulk? let's shoot him into space!) and until this point the story itself just seemed incredibly at odds with the tone of the MCU - though the films are more and more embracing

Like people didn't say that about Guardians of the Galaxy, or Ant-Man, or

"Hi I'm super-skrull, I have the random powers of fire, elasticity, rock-like skin and invisibility. For no reason at all! nothing to do with any heroes, nope none at all!"

Ultimate universe =/= MCU

ah yes please, tell me all about the bad films,