Sadly, yes.
Sadly, yes.
Yeah, I always kind of just took it as Anakin really only was concerned with saving Padme, and the BS about Mace overthrowing him and whatever was just an excuse he was giving to rationalize his selfishness.
WTF, my reply keeps disappearing… anyway:
WTF, my reply disappear… anyway:
It's sort of unclear what it was exactly, but Anakin was apparently there with Palpatine the entire time Mace Windu was, just kind of on the sidelines. It made it extra unclear what it was that specifically turned him to the dark side, so they removed him and added the sequence with him in the temple by himself…
Well, Revenge of the Sith also had a completely different version of Anakin's change before extensive reshoots, so it's not exactly "new." (How has it already been almost 12 years since ROTS came out?) It's not always just studio oversight or focus groups, but just the filmmakers realizing they could have done things…
There may not have ever been a line from any show that made me laugh as hard as that one.
As someone who sat through their training, I found the company to be very manipulative towards its own salespeople more so than towards clients. When you go in for the job "interview," they don't tell you any info, and when I finally found out basically what it was, they lied about many of the details. Then you go in…
That honestly kind of blew my mind, in a "I really never thought they could (or would) do that on television" kind of way, doubling the episode length just so he could stalk an ant for even longer.
Wow, those last two shots were maybe the worst CGI I've seen in a movie in the last decade. Seriously looked like it just cut to a video game for no apparent reason. Was it that hard to just build some damn crosses?
I rewatched that for the first time since it aired shortly after my own dad died, and it just broke me up. It works so perfectly whether you take the point of view of the child who lost his parent or the parent who lost the child. It may be my favorite Trek episode of all.
The development of the friendship between Bashir and O’Brien is just absolutely delightful and completely realistic. Best Star Trek pairing since Kirk and Spock.
Absolutely. I love they way he introduces himself as "Wapcaplet, Adrian Wapcaplet" with just the perfect stress on the "Wap" and "cap."
Yeah, rewatching the series recently, I couldn't believe that I actually liked Vic. On paper it seems like he'd be the most annoying imaginable character for a Star Trek series, but he's actually enjoyable.
This was exactly my view of it. Didn't like it when it first aired, didn't even really like the series when it aired. But I just recently rewatched it and it quickly became my favorite Trek series, much to my amazement. And this episode was a great, very funny break from the bleakness of the war.
Oh man, “Pierrot Le Fou” is fantastic! I just absolutely love the weird, off-balance way the villain floats around.
SUPER late reply, but I think it was just a pun, naming the Inuit "Canuck," as in "Canadian." Maybe I'm wrong, I dunno.
"Laid waste to the herd" just about killed me.
Not quite the same (at all), but I did the legal version of this by buying air time to put a couple ridiculous commercials on at weird times in Tucson. They were ostensibly to advertise for a street performance of me and my fake band. Fun stuff, trying to figure out the best way to waste airtime.
https://www.youtube.com…
"He's very fussy about his drums."
"They loom large in his legend."