The Villain Bar. They all hang in the off-hours.
The Villain Bar. They all hang in the off-hours.
She was in the "Kendra sees Star Labs" scene. But she's pretty much just there, and nothing else.
In Soviet Russia, Super Soldier Program chooses you.
Bothans mostly just die. It's what they do.
What about the Lich Cocktail Mixer?
Well, now you have my attention.
Look, when you're running from a killer, do you want to be grimy with limp hair? No, of course not. That would be absurd.
She only appeared in a handful of episodes— she played Stephanie, who was kinda-sorta Don's niece from his first marriage.
The problem with the Impossible Girl was it damaged the fundamental point of the Companion, who is supposed to be an audience avatar. We're usually learning with the Companion. Except by making the Companion also the Mystery, she became a cypher to the audiences.
The studio set aside lots to film lots of Lotz.
You HAVE seen her Mad Men episodes, yes?
I'm always fascinated when people compared its cancellation to other killed-before-it-had-a-chance shows like Firefly. I mean, three low-rated seasons. It had a fair shake.
I remember around that time, Bellisario came to speak at my college, and gave a nice little insight into his mindset about "selling out" there.
Sometimes I feel like people are constantly expecting TWD to get to the proverbial fireworks factory, which it's never going to get to, but at the same time they can't act like there's some "What Is The Island?" question they aren't being told the answer to. So they express disdain when the story doesn't 'advance',…
Ding! Lady In The Water doesn't have a twist. It just doesn't. And I saw critiques that complained that it wasn't there, but in a, "this time he didn't even bother with a bad twist" way.
A friend of mine and I coined that as "NowPunk". Similarly, all the CSI-type shows, where the science is shown as "current", but does things that we simply cannot do.
I won't deny it hews pretty close to formula. But when the article's complaint is that the Marvel movie industry wouldn't dare go "smaller" when it's latest movie not only structurally but quite literally went "smaller", it's a strange complaint to make.
Well, that's just it— Bruce Willis doesn't react "weirdly" to water. When he was a kid he nearly drowned once. That's not weird, that's pretty normal. And Mr. Glass was depressed because it ruined his whole idea, but then he was all, "Oh, right, heroes have One Weakness, and yours is water!" So he uses that to get…
Please. Everyone knows Something-man's nemesis is Dr. Evil-stuff.
Forget it, Jake. It's some nerd shit.