So, I've been on board with this show more than most around here but I haven't gotten around to watching this season. I was completely bummed that it's not the *final* season, because the show needs to end for this journey to mean anything at all.
So, I've been on board with this show more than most around here but I haven't gotten around to watching this season. I was completely bummed that it's not the *final* season, because the show needs to end for this journey to mean anything at all.
I think it's just a reference to The Black Spot in Treasure Island, which is a mark of death.
It felt more fun than the first one, which was just such a drag. Cars 2 was kind of a genre film, a spy flick, which was interesting.
I gotta say I oddly liked Cars 2 much more than Cars 1, so while I certainly won't see this in the theaters…well, it is Pixar, and I just never know how I'll feel about these Cars movies.
The show seems pretty self-aware, to be honest. At the exact point where you're thinking, "Dougie is great, but it's time to get Cooper back and get this show on the road," there's a character yelling "You need to wake up!" right into the camera. At the point where you're starting to wonder if any of these dots will…
I'm going to wait and see. This struck me as this season's Laura Palmer moment, the thing that's going to bring the whole town together in mourning, the thing that will finally bring Cooper back to Twin Peaks. If it turns out to be nothing…then yeah, that's pretty cheap.
Hey AJ, you're a creepy obsessive weirdo who should rethink his or her life.
My showtime stream was a little shaky…the kid left garmombozia behind?
I love that more and more music fills the show the more Cooper wakes up. I have a suspicion that this season will be split into two halves—first half setting up the mystery, second half solving it. Cooper is clearly emerging from the Black Lodge with some heightened ability. He's always been tapped into his spiritual…
The Nacho Pill Swap may be the most breaking bad the show has been. The drawn out dread, suspense…just masterfully done.
If the show is going where it seems to be going, the build up will have been worth it. Any other show would have just jumped right back into the town and characters that made the show popular. But because they're *building* to it, seeing "Dougie" contemplate the words "agent" and "case files" has such a profound…
These books were so important to me as a kid, and they still hold up as being really funny. Glad to hear this movie wasn't an afterthought.
Joel Cinnamon's character? He was like, some lying dirt ball who covered up for his corrupt, murderous boss and risked national security and the fate of the world to bang a literal supernatural creature. And he ate chicken really weird. So he kind of sucked, too.
YESSS. Why do they not pursue this? The MCU has really not nailed a single romance for a sustained period of time. The absolute best romance was Cap and Agent Carter, and they squashed that in the first film (though his love for her remained, until he just sort of…banged her niece 20 seconds after she died). I liked…
To be fair, EVERY race and gender in Suicide Squad are depicted as completely reprehensible so…I guess that's equality? Kind of?
Please don't confuse DCEU fanboys with bigoted assholes who wanted in to Women-Only screenings of this movie and didn't want black Storm Troopers in Force Awakens. As a fan of the DCEU I just feel happy to have a movie that everyone can agree is fun, that empowers women, and that does justice to a significant pop…
This movie looks like Thor with more likeable side-characters and a better romance. Which seems pretty fantastic to me.
I'm so glad this is resonating with critics. This one, of all the DC movies, needed to be a hit. Wonder Woman deserves to have her own Superman: The Movie or Batman Begins.
The marketing has not been fucking understated. It's everywhere. There's tv commercials for it all the time, I've seen the trailer accompanied with most of the blockbusters I've seen the past few months, there's posters everywhere, T-Shirts everywhere. I just don't get that "controversy."
Kimmy Goes to a Play is a hilarious episode of television that critics overthought way too much.