thehelmarocking--disqus
The_Helmaroc_King
thehelmarocking--disqus

Ah, that's a shame. I did manage to do something similar to delete a Disqus that was technically mine, as it was created by a site I didn't comment on anymore, but it was under my usual email address.

Is this your old account? Because if it is, you could try copying and pasting the second part of the URL, avclub-33c0b11e200dd2f9b60e169fe58b08cc, into the username field of the login screen. I'm not sure if your old password will work, though, and there's no way to tell what email it's using from the public profile.

I heard he wears a very nice hat.

Hah! Right on, G-Man. I'm happy to see your work.

Ain't no murder like murder by murder!

How are we supposed to describe the things that kill our boners without "boner-killing"? Wood-wasting? Stiffy-slaying? Erection eradicating? I think not!

Personally, I thought it could have been a good movie, but they had a bunch of plot points they "needed" to cover, so they covered them without actually piecing them together properly.

I remember watching A Good Day to Die Hard with my brother, and I was just speechless at how much of an asshole they made McClane. He and his son fall out of a building and it turns out his son fell on a piece of rebar. "You gonna cry?" Why the hell would you be like that, man?

The magic is real(ly an illusion)!

What about eagles, swans, or golden showers?

He does most of his talking… with his fists!

It's so demeaning to be forced to engage in a "conversation" with a non-human.

Also featuring a cameo by Nathan Fillion as Buck from ODST.

I'd say this was my favorite Halo game, but no matter how poignant you say it is, Kat's death was bullshit!

She's a harsh mistress.

Telltale and Game of Thrones, together at last. Sure to be filled with empathetic characters that nothing bad ever happens to!

Has Richie Rich ever had a dark-and-gritty reboot? Well, it does now!

"Inside Llewyn Davis… opened with an impressive $100, 500-per-screen average on its four screens." I know what you mean, but I can't help but read it like the film made only $100, but averaged $500 per theater by showing it on one-fifth of a screen.

Did no-one want to bring up Prometheus, or did everyone else recognize Old Man Pearce?

I saw Frozen today, which was alright, but it did have some third-act issues. Close to the end the plot started feeling predictable, but the beats didn't feel well-established. At a minimum, though, I thought the movie was charming and it looked quite nice.