The period/comic hybrid definitely is part of the problem. A lot of people my parents' age could watch a period piece like Mad Men or Downton Abbey, but something action-oriented that has a lot of comedy? Not so much.
The period/comic hybrid definitely is part of the problem. A lot of people my parents' age could watch a period piece like Mad Men or Downton Abbey, but something action-oriented that has a lot of comedy? Not so much.
I don't see why there can't be an R-rated edition for home consumption, like what DC is thinking of doing with Batman v Superman.
The Friends clip reminds me of a friend who often said, "I love you," to me and I said it back to her, but as much as I really did love her, I really didn't want to say "I love you" back. One time, I responded with, "Thank you," and she kind of laughed and made fun of me saying that, but not in a harsh way. After…
Why is Scarlett on Team Stark? I thought she was best buddy with Cap?
I hope Supergirl's universe kind of converges into Flash's (or vice versa, but Flash's universe is more established with Arrow, Constatine, Legends of Tomorrow, and Vixen) as a permanent thing. In other words, I don't want this episode to be a "one-off".
24: Jackoff
So I don't have to turn in my man card if I want to see a Disney princess movie without bringing my imaginary daughter? Phew, that's a relief. My daughter talks too much.
I'm looking forward to this. I don't see why it would be bad just because Kiefer Sutherland isn't going to be in it. I don't know. Maybe I'm just optimistic.
Michael Ironside's role as General Lane is the only casting I can think of that Smallville has done better than Supergirl among their shared characters, although I preferred him as the voice of Darkseid a lot more.
This is why I hate laugh tracks. I feel the compulsion to laugh at something that's not funny due to its contagious nature. I have to repress every gut required to laugh just to give it the response it deserves: apathy.
I would love this, but the Sheldon in this hypothetical episode wouldn't have been possible had it not been the character growth Amy has spurred in him, IMO.
Mitchell does not seem like a sort of good gift giver. That's more something Cam would be good at. For example, Cam was willing to let their gardener have a wedding at their house way back in the first season.
I think the idea of Sheldon and Amy conceiving a child may be some sort of trope inversion, given how Sheldon was for the longest time one of the least likely characters to "slip one past the goalie" as Seinfeld says.
The closer the plot veers towards Howard, Bernadette, or Stewart, as of late, the worse it gets. This show simply doesn't know how to write these characters any more. I receive the impression from the episode description that Howard and Bernadette were really going to miss Stewart. Instead, the buildup was just a…
For me, the characters, Sherlock especially, talk so fast that I rely on closed captioning (I usually have closed captioning just to hear every word because I'm slightly hard of hearing, not for speed), so I always felt the episodes from series 1 I've watched to be hard for me to understand, like I was always…
I'm not sure I realized it then, but Sherlock referring to the abominable bride as "he" at least clued me in, as in subtext: pay attention, this is important, and at least has something to do with modern Sherlock. Also, Hooper being dressed as a male, but I think that's more in hindsight.
I like the Victorian setting and applying the abominable bride to Moriarty. Having seen nothing of the show since Series 1 (when it comes to TV, I'm always late), I felt like I could understand the plot surprisingly well enough with what little I've read about Series 2 and 3, but something didn't fit right. It's nice…
I loved this film. It's a great re-calibration of a saga that sorely needed it.
I thought this was a great Christmas episode for Modern Family. Besides Season 1's "Undeck the Halls", I can't seem to remember anything significant about the others. I think I will remember this episode well, despite the lackluster season that's preceded it so far.
Modern Family hasn't had five Halloween episodes in five consecutive seasons, if that's what you're saying. I've noticed that they have a Christmas episode on an odd-numbered season (Season 1 had "Undeck the Halls", Season 3 had "Express Christmas", Season 5 had "The Old Man and the Tree", and now Season 7's "White…