I'm sorry this didn't get picked up for s second season. I didn't think the first season was great but I thought it had bones around which to develop a more episodic narrative.
I'm sorry this didn't get picked up for s second season. I didn't think the first season was great but I thought it had bones around which to develop a more episodic narrative.
Even that line didn't save this episode for me. But I will say that I hated it a little less by reading the AV Club's review and your comment.
What the hell is wrong with this show? It's got an interesting premise, the Mr. Robot vibe and okay actors, but I was bored to tears by episode five. Are we all so shallow that we need the charisma of a Rami Malek to make a new show pop?
I actually read the book when it came out, and saw the movie in the theater. Although I have seen the movie many times since then, I would say that some of what the movie places in broad strokes depend on both the context of the book and the time.
I didn't like this episode, either. By the time it got to the humor of the Sarah Paulson character talking about knowing Shelby (which was great), I was checked out from gore overload.
In the novella?
I loved Adina Porter, but not much else about this episode. I understand that this season is a kind of homage to "Blood Feast" and "Texas Chainsaw," but I am over the torture porn.
I think it's a terrible, boring show. I guess you feel differently, but I think the writing is derivative and full of one trope after another.
I don't see that in any of the stories. Sorry.
I think it's left up to the reader what they are.
I agree with you, bit it won't be made by the guys who are making WD.
Walking Dead is the worst of all the zombie films/tv shows,
The story "I Am Legend" is about zombies. And it is so much better than any of the screen treatments,
Romero essentially invented the zombie movie, as well as the independent horror genre. But he himself let the zombie metaphor fall into schlock in his last two movies.
Great question, and it's too bad none of the press seems to be asking it. Not a single article about this story says anything about what exactly Hitchcock did to ruin her career other than the anecdotal stuff mentioned by Tippi herself.
I know you had to reach for that one, but I appreciated it anyway. :-)
if you are asking whether the decline of his film career is well documented, the answer is "yes," Although he had a long and under appreciated career (it still stuns me that he never got an Oscar), "Marnie" was his last blockbuster. "Torn Curtain" was the last movie he made in which the studio have him the budget to…
This, from the same man, who left his wife and child for the incredibly manipulative and self important Yoko Ono.
Thanks!
When I lived in San Francisco, my dentist was Dr. Les Plack. He moved to Santa Rosa, but I will never forget him offering me laughing gas for my teeth cleaning and having a very stoned hygienist who started every conversation with, "Oh, wow!"