whiskeyclone--disqus
whiskey-clone
whiskeyclone--disqus

They appear to have been wandering around the same area of rural Georgia for 4 years; eventually they'll go somewhere else and realise everything is fine, it was just localised and the area was quarantined.

It's the most competent season of the show so far, but if you've managed to free yourself from it, I don't suggest returning.

A-

Even before that, I thought Bev was being a bit stupid in the scene where she examined the body with Hannibal, kind of giving herself away a little bit too easily. I was immediately convinced she wasn't going to be alive by the end of the episode.

Excuse me, Billy Riggins is clearly one of the finest individuals to ever grace our TV screens. He's just under a lot of pressure, okay?!

Even as I hated season 3 of Homeland and most of the seeds of its decline were in season 2, I'll still defend the second season of Homeland for containing some stellar episodes. The 12 episodes of VM season 2 I saw were a sludge of too much stupid plot involving too many boring characters, and I cared about none of it.

He's fine, but he's not exactly a major part of the show most of the time.

I hoped to get through the show in time for the movie, but man that second season is just a mess. Also, and I imagine fans will want me burned at the stake for this, I think Kristen Bell was the only capable actor on the show; everyone else was just so bland, so when the show would do plots where characters wouldn't

Was not aware of that. Thanks for the info.

I don't know, I agree with Erik. I just didn't care about their marriage; always felt like there were too many turns in it for me to get invested. Also, their kids were so fucking annoying.

Why can't this guy get on cable? This sounds like an interesting show that might not get to see its potential fulfilled because of network limitations. On the upside, it's the first of Killen's shows that actually sounds like it could work as an ongoing series.

I'd kind of love to see an American Horror Story-style series based around season-long adaptations of Stephen King novels. IT, Salem's Lot, The Stand, The Dead Zone…But do not let King write a word of them.

Meh, I found the recording just about listenable if I turned it up. I thought it was a pretty great episode actually, because these guys play well to a live audience. But unfortunately the sound quality probably means I won't return to it.

Sounds like Obummer's Muslim Nazi Socialist agenda to me (he shouts, through large amounts of mouth-froth)

I sort of enjoyed the puppet show, if only because it filled in a lot of backstory, but it was another case where Wallace went for something outright comedic and it kind of didn't work at all.

I read it over 2 months recently (disciplined myself to read roughly 20 pages a day, and feel better for it). It's not a perfect book by any means; I had to spend so much time just keeping track of all the plot threads that sometimes DFW's varied ideas got lost under all the detail. Also, there were some parts that

The cast members have done so many episodes at this point though, they could probably make new ones by editing together their line-readings from previous episodes. Like Milhouse in the Radioactive Man movie!

I haven't actually got round to watching The X-Files yet (soon, soon), but I kind of hope the reviews of S9 resemble Zack and Todd's reviews of Millennium S3- those were pretty damn entertaining.

All worth it for Easy Rider: The Ride Back

Or what we're going to be doing this year?