The Lamb Of God Lies Down On Broadway
The Lamb Of God Lies Down On Broadway
Aykroyd was my dream casting for Nite-Owl back in the late 1980s. With Redford as Ozymandias and Dennis Farina as The Comedian.
Some good insights in the review, but also some assumptions and interpretations of the OGN that I don’t think are necessarily borne out:
If we’re doing fixes, getting the title to read “Silk SPECTRE” would be a good place to start. . .
If we’re being prurient (and why wouldn’t we be), I’d vote for Melissa’s outfit in the monologue. Yowza. Heidi usually brings the heat in that department, but last night I was giving thanks for Melissa in a thankless role.
Implied but never stated, at least in the original. I don’t recall if they made it more explicit in BEFORE WATCHMEN, but I don’t imagine Lindelof feels beholden to those.
It’d be a retcon, but a fairly minor one. You could even justify it as “unreliable narrator” since that appearance was in Sally’s memories.
I was pretty sure the kid was supposed to be the old man, but I was sure of it when I noticed the kid had the same mole next to his eye as Gossett.
I was wondering at first why the cops were even looking for Jesse in the movie - with no survivors, how would anyone know Jesse was even AT the Nazi compound? But then I realized the CSIs would notice Todd was strangled (not shot by Walt’s machine gun) and check the prints on the chain. . .
. . . criminals, junkies, or Steve Gomez. . .
You may be right, but me and my crowd preferred Pulaski. We found Crusher - before and after - pretty bland. Pulaski was a bit too mean at first, but by the end of her season I liked her a lot. Crusher fits more with the crew as Family, but Pulaski had a lot more spark, IMO.
Save me from the grays, please?!?
This is the exact reason why I wish TNG had brought Pulaski back to be the overly-experimental doctor in “Ethics.” When Crusher tells the guest-doctor-of-the-week she’s being reckless, you accept it as fact. If she was instead sparring with Pulaski, who had a closer friendship with Worf than Crusher did AND a history…
People like to claim he just played himself, but Nicholson was straight-up the Englehart/Rogers “Laughing Fish” Joker. I wish he was 30 pounds lighter, but it’s an otherwise very creditable portrayal of that version of the character.
I goof on Franco’s frequent pretensions as much as the next guy, but his direction of the brothers this week was terrific. The blocking and FX work in this episode - both the moving cold open and when Vincent holds the dying Frankie - were seamless. Much better than the family party an episode or two ago.
All three leads in MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE were fantastic. The fact that Romano could hold his own with Andre Braugher (and co-created the show) raised him fairly high in my esteem.
Here’s a weird one. Back in the early 1990s, a screenwriting professor of mine very matter-of-factly said Martin rewrote the original ROCKY and that “everyone knew it.” Yet I’ve never seen mention of this anywhere else.
Such a well-reasoned response.
“It’s not what you expect” and “It’s very, very good” were not meant to correlate, sorry. “The show is not what one would expect, story-wise”, might be a better way to put it.
As someone who loved the book and thought the movie missed the mark (Rorschach, Comedian, and title montage notwithstanding). . .