timothyfoley--disqus
Tim Foley
timothyfoley--disqus

I think "The End" holds a special place in my heart because it was the crossover point after which I was able to appreciate things like "The End".

It doesn't. Jim Carrey's performance in that movie has nothing whatsoever to do with the character in the books, or anything else in the books, or anything else in the movie, for that matter.

The last three are all pretty extraordinary. There are some passages in "The Penultimate Peril" in particular which are really, really beautiful. I'd probably say that one is my favorite overall, although the last few chapters of "The End" I would say are the crowning moment of a seriously fantastic series.

I…I don't know how to react to this. I wouldn't have thought of him in a million years for the part, but I don't especially think he's wrong for the part. It's slightly deterring my hopes that the Netflix series would go with the darker version of Olaf from the books, but I could see how NPH could conceivably pull

DC:
"…We haven't thought this out well."

To my mind, Food Chain is still the best guest-animated episode, but this was still excellent. The animation was beautiful, and the storyline was different without feeling too out of place. It actually felt like an episode of the show proper, rather than authorized fanfaction (coughWaterParkPrankcough).
Now, the next

I suspect that was a positive review.

"Waterloo Sunset". Greatest song ever. Easy.

"We can be Heroes…just for four months."

"Ol' Starchy losing his sanity, then his wife, now his credibility."
He's like Ice King in reverse. Simon lost his credibility, then his wife (Fiance), then his sanity.

It would be pretty math if it turned out there was some underlying connection between all the big unexplained stuff from the past few seasons. These spirit things, Guiseppe, Golb, the Puhoy world, Football's mirror world, Chips and Ice Cream, Matthew, Finn's dream about his thorn arm, the ancient world of Darren and

The things had cattails in them, exactly like the one in Dirt Beer Guy's head after he was reanimated. They kept popping up every time he broke something in Cherry Cream Soda's house, so I'm assuming this is going to become a recurring plot thread.

I love that final line from Finn. Jeremy Shada has had some really great moments over the years in terms of pure acting ("That road you're on, leads to nowhere" being a favorite of mine), but this was one of the best. It totally sells the alien, unfathomable mystery of what they just saw; it doesn't lighten the mood,

I know; I just used him as an example of what they've made do without.

I assume this is just a round-about way of saying that in BVS, their version of Doomsday somehow ties in with Apokalips, and the next movie will be Justice League vs. Darkseid. Because pacing and intelligently structuring a franchise is for those Marvel pussies, amiright? I mean, where else can they take these movies?

Fair enough. That sequence just struck me as being outside the pastiche of the rest of the episode.

I'm waiting for a quick-cut montage set to "Greased Lightening". And I hate Grease, but that would be awesome.

Just wait.

I think this is one of the best "Zany" episodes the show has ever done. It's just gag after gag after gag, and nearly all of them land. It's a bit late to be calling this show "Scattered", Sava. Either you're onboard the crazy train or you're not, and not every stop that train makes is going to be a Bergman film. This