theglasscase--disqus
theglasscase
theglasscase--disqus

S4 was obviously bad, but the show wasn't significantly better in S5 when Harmon was back. It was just out of ideas and kept repeating itself. It was lucky to get this far based on the ratings, but it was finished creatively anyway.

I wasn't a fan of Butler playing Bodhi, but I'm more not a fan of the idea of an Olympus Has Fallen sequel, so I don't know what to think any more.

So glad to have Louie back, two unexpected, wonderfully imaginative episodes.

"Believe that a major construction company would wait until the night before a multi-million dollar job to secure all the necessary permits?"

Macon Blair is *really* good in this. Dwight doesn't really know what he's doing, just that he has to do it, but Blair never plays him like an idiot.

You'll really get your money's worth with this one, there are two shots of him and he speaks in one!

You should just kill him so he stops getting to do terrible cameos in every Marvel film, regardless of which studio produces it.

It has a huge number of problems, including, but not limited to, the appearances of the bad guys (in terms of CGI-ness and just how they look), being too long, being boring, and spending a lot of time setting up the third film.

I saw it with a friend who usually doesn't stay for post credits scenes. When the film finished, he said 'Are you staying for the extra scene?' My answer was 'No, that was shit!'.

Putting an ad for a Fox film at the end of a terrible movie somehow makes it even worse.

I think the idea behind Season of the Witch was that Halloween would become an anthology series, with a new tale each year. But then it was terrible and they ran back to get Mikey.

Anyway, here's the found footage reboot plot:

I mean, I'm very 'whatever' about a Friday the 13th reboot, who really cares, but making it found footage is a bad idea.

Just to clear things up, Britpop is a collective way of describing any number of bands that started having success in the 'Cool Britannia' years, which started at some point in 1994 and ended in 1997 or 1998 (Could argue Oasis Be Here Now killed it).

Could definitely make the case that Love Spreads should have been in there to vote for. Their debut album was too early for Britpop though.

There's no doubt that Britpop attracted a lot of chancers who fluked one half decent song and got an album deal out of it.

There's a link to the 40 further down the page.

A Northern Soul is The Verve's masterpiece album, History their masterpiece single.

Lush made it at #30 with Ladykillers.

It's amazing that they made the shortlist, *everybody* hated them!