It's all going to pieces once it's revealed that Tyler is the rapist and Adrian is covering his tracks.
It's all going to pieces once it's revealed that Tyler is the rapist and Adrian is covering his tracks.
You can say a lot of shit about Ryan Murphy, but at least working on one of his shows sounds like an absolute blast.
"I am seated in an office, surrounded by heads and bodies. I had purchased liquid ass before this."
That's impressive. I haven't seen the third episode yet, but man I am looking forward to how the abbies look.
One of Age of Ultron's themes is fatherhood, for sure, but I thought of it more as being about creation than anything else - especially regarding Ultron and Vision. Stark and Banner creates Ultron - a safekeeping robot - on their own, in secret, without telling the rest of the team. The creation of Vision, on the…
I see what you mean and raise you a dream sequence with Coogan where he tries to have sex with an old, female cartoon character after her son just killed himself.
He keeps saying he's so busy, but what is he actually DOING? argh. Oh well. A new Shadow novel would be great.
It was on Shona's list at the end though.
I loved Broadchurch, but the problem with remaking it seem obvious. It wasn't a wonderfully different or flashy premise; it was just a standard "whodunit", well-written and well-acted show. It took the serial murder mystery, wrote out the characters and balanced the mystery with them in a way that didn't feel fresh,…
I think that's very likely. Part of season seven feeling so slapped together is probably because Moffat got his hands full with the 50th Anniversary, before Matt said he was leaving and then he got the Christmas special who would tie up all the loose ends in addition to that.
Odd tonal shifts are the name of the game when it comes to this show, though.
It's a diffferent show now, that's for sure. Though this is part of the fun; that it's always changing. Maybe this era of the show, this Doctor, just isn't for you. You can always come back after The Doctor regenerates.
It did. But we know that's over though; Gallifrey has escaped its bubble-universe and is somewhere out there, with the cracks being closed as a result.
Yes. I'm tired of Doctor Who returning to Daleks and Cybermen, so I'd rather it be a new idea than the show going back to The Master. I like the new ideas, and Death Incarnate would be very Moffat-y.
Eh. I like Moffat's work more. RTD is way too silly for me most of the time, and has too many cheap solutions. Sure, Moffat has his fair share of those as well, but they've usually led to things going terribly wrong later.
Yeah, if the whole show becomes like this episode that'd be a mistake. Part of the fun of Doctor Who are the romps, the fun and often a little silly episodes. It can go epic and a little dark, like A Good Man Goes To War, but then the next episode is a silly little thing called Let's Kill Hitler.
Not to worry, I had some earlier. Haven't quite figured out how to operate this machinery yet, so while I'm running around, hitting things with a hammer, it results in some strange… results.
That's a good call! I thought "Time Lord" when I saw the premiere, but now I've read theories that she's Death incarnate (The Doctor's constant companion) or a female version of The Master.
Yeah, that's true. Smith ran around and was silly, but this Doctor just doesn't care. It's almost eerie.
Jeez, this show has become dark though, hasn't it? Or at least more serious. It's an interesting fit, and I'm very intrigued to how this'll work out with Gatiss' Sherwood-romp next week.