wharfie-time
ArminTamzarian
wharfie-time

Love Kincaid, but she's edged into third place by Robinette in my books.

Those defense lawyers were great strategists, though.

And to make sure that someone asked the murderer, "And did that make you…angry?"

Every time I go to New York, I hold a cell phone to my ear and walk around saying stuff like, "I don't care what McGinnity says. This is my account, so make the trades!" One day, I will come across a guy slumped against a wall and be able to say, "Hey buddy, you okay? Hey buddy! Oh my God. Call 911!"

This is also a good opportunity for my favourite game: Fantasy Law & Order. You choose the best possible lineup from all seasons of the show. I'll go first.

Also good - JK Simmons' terrible psychiatrist. Not as bad as Dr Huang on SVU, but still not super helpful.

9/11

"You're walking a fine line, McCoy. Just make sure that you get all the relevant people in a room together two minutes before the top of the hour and trick a confession out of one of them."

McCOY: We can't let this one go, Adam! If we let one terrible AV Club comment go without response, what does that say to the next poster, or the one after that?

Also missing - 'Teenage Wasteland' (the death penalty is reintroduced in New York), and the season 9 two-parter 'Refuge', in which we see how far McCoy will go in trampling the Constitution in order to achieve a higher form of justice.

Points off also for a particularly egregious use of the post-Dark Knight "Don't you see? He WANTED to get caught!" cliche.

I don't know if it's fair to lump The Departed in with No Reservations.

I don't mean to brag, but it's opening at midnight on 17 December in Australia, which is actually 2pm on 14 October 2014 once you factor in the time difference.

I do think that Bond does have a backstory, vague and often ignored though it may be, which reflects his depiction as a privileged white Englishman. You wouldn't necessarily need to change those details for the character to be black, but it would certainly affect the way in which they're perceived: the story of a

Mulaneyological

If you've read the book, it's an almost inconceivably dumb twist on a relatively tight, focused and thematic story. I can see why it's thrown the review off, but who knows? Maybe it's still an okay film if you're going in cold.

It's been a long time, but from memory I think the book was pretty clear on nuclear war being the cause of all problems. But the book also came out in the 70s when the risk of an all-out nuclear war was considerably higher.

Good article, but I don't know if I agree with the assertion that BoJack Horseman pretends not to have a heart. It's one of the more nakedly emotional shows out there, despite its zaniness.

Always interesting to hear what critics make of an accent. Apparently Cox is mumbling through a "fake-sounding British accent" (presumably that means an English accent - Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish people are all British). That's pretty funny considering that Scottish-born Cox was trained in London and did time

Well, at least I know how Big Time in Hollywood, FL ends now.