The Dolphins went with "It Got Worse".
The Dolphins went with "It Got Worse".
Couple of problems here. The Raid only came out late 2011 - so what you're saying is that the writer of Dredd saw that film, ripped it off, sold the script to a studio; the studio greenlit production, raised funds, cast actors, planned production, filmed everything, did post and visual effects... all in the space of…
Gigantic playful toddler.
You are 2-nil down to Stoke at half time...
Is it just me or is that statement something that contains no meaning whatsoever.
Colony Wars is definitely in my top 10 list of games I would fall over myself to buy a remake of.
Well, they're not in real life. But maybe they will be in the game.
Space is an ocean and all ships are galleons. Everyone knows this.
Dry your eyes. When even 44 men plus unlimited recourse to video technology can't even competently call an NFL game with 100% accuracy, the crack squad of 1 guy and a couple of minions that the EPL makes do with can be cut some slack.
I feel you. The more distance we get from days where Alex Ferguson can throw a flag on the field, the better.
Yeah, but as a kicker. I mean, come on...
$5 million
I give them five on the basis that the third and fourth episodes are quite often the ones that the writers are "meh" about and the ones that the network outright hate and want to keep out of the way of a hopefully strong back-end. That's what I take from commentary on Firefly and The Shield, anyway.
A season later and now the roommates are the best part.
The Shield pilot: "This is shit. This is shit. This is shit..." [final scene] "OH SHIT. SHIT IS ON!"
I think the doom of Awake can be summed up as so: The pilot was great, but it forced the show to go one of two ways - the interesting, but potentially convoluted and ratings-shedding way would have gone deep on exploring the nature of the dual realities experienced by the main character. The boring, NBC mandated way…
Another good book in this vein is The Book of Dave by Will Self. Wikipedia can explain it better than I can:
I would say the distinctions in those examples aren't down to any vague concept of "attractiveness", but more specifically came about due to Norman French being the language of the aristocracy and elite - whilst the more Germanic English remained the tongue of the peasant in the fields. Hence the animal in the field -…
I don't understand this point.
But, this is not real German, but a phonetic representation of the stereotypical German accent as heard in old movies! - A German guy