As has been noted by others, if this were a regular two-hour movie, we'd have seen roughly 20 minutes of it by now. I'd say there's plenty of time in the remaining 14 hours for show to develop its female characters.
As has been noted by others, if this were a regular two-hour movie, we'd have seen roughly 20 minutes of it by now. I'd say there's plenty of time in the remaining 14 hours for show to develop its female characters.
Since the book was written after the new series, Lynch doesn't have to have read the book for Frost to know which characters were important in the new series.
Actually, the seemingly unimportant character of Otis, when Cooper picks up Daria and Ray, has strikingly similar mannerisms to the old waiter. It's so eerie…if almost certainly just a cosmic coincidence.
In my rewatch, I noted that Truman says Dougie "went out with his boots on", and Coop is reborn as Dougie with no shoes.
I think it might be more of a reference to the bit being essentially a callback to one of The Missing Pieces.
Since Denise criticizes Cole for his attraction to young, female agents, this has to be a plot point.
I rewatched the original series and at one point James describes driving at night with his lights off. Maybe that didn't work out for him.
Dougie Cooper is in Vegas, not South Dakota.
I dislike this because it ultimately reinforces the idea that fan service and never letting anything change or evolve could not just be pleasing, but even inherently artistically valuable. Sure, it's fun to imagine, but I don't buy that the movie would actually be BETTER, just that it would deliver a different, more…
This is a strange complaint I have seen from numerous people about The Raid dudes. Is it unusual for cameo appearances to be insignificant? I was just pleased to see them.
Sarsgaard said in an interview that a scheduling conflict meant he couldn't do it.
this kind of complimentary, positive attitude is not what I expect from a person named Dickhead Killjoy
It's really dumb but delightfully so, IMO. In addition to everyone else, Orlando Bloom is actually kinda great as a hilariously prissy, mustache-twirling villain, but his big moment would've been in a sequel.
Excited to see what he brings to the role of the director of Predator 2.
I thought the idea was that Claude was teaching her to take it that seriously, but then the show didn't really play it that way.
The show has a hundred great cameos, but I liked these the best.
It's amazing, although nothing can ever top "Love Take Me Down (To the Streets)" from Role Models.
I kind of agree but her snapping a pencil in sexual frustration is also one of my favorite moments.
Tell me about it.
It's a shame you didn't get a chance to ask about Amazon Women on the Moon. I would've liked to know that working on it was great and everyone involved was great and even if it was rumored someone wasn't great, well, everyone was trying their best.