Absolutely. I want to watch superheroes engage in superheroics, not argue about philosophy.
Absolutely. I want to watch superheroes engage in superheroics, not argue about philosophy.
So that's the last time we ever hear anything about Kazons? That's the last episode I've seen. I gave up after season two, but I wanted to finish the two-parter first.
King of the Hill was on Netflix for several years, but it looks like it isn't anymore.
This movie started my trend of watching 1/4 of Futurama. I saw this but never got around to the other three movies, and then I watched the first set of 13 CC episodes but never got around to the rest.
Absolutely. My wife - a big Futurama fan - hates this movie mostly because of their design.
Brave is full of recognizable actors - Billy Connolly, Emma Thompson, Craig Ferguson, Kevin McKidd, Robbie Coltrane. That's about the same level of celebrity as this lineup, I'd say.
I'm telling you, man. A lot of that stuff worked a lot better for me the second time.
So I'm looking over the list of episodes, and it looks like most of them are clearly two-parters - the two Moffat ones, the ones by Toby Whithouse and Peter Harness, and the aforementioned Maisie Williams ones, which are by Catherine Treganna and Jamie Mathieson.
"School Reunion" was in my introduction to K9. I was 21 when I saw it, and I loved him immediately.
The only thing I like about Hazel is Shirley Booth as Mrs. Claus in The Year Without a Santa Claus.
Comedies especially really feel rushed lately. Every episode has A, B, and C stories, and there's no time to serve any of them. I think 42-minute dramas are actually a lot better paced than most old 50-minute ones, but a return to 25-minute sitcoms would be wonderful.
It really is crazy how nostalgic this article made me for those days. Not nostalgia for when it was new - nostalgia for when it was 30 years old.
To be fair, he was really good as Rob's brother Stacy in several episodes of The Dick Van Dyke Show, so I can see why he would seem like a good lead for a sitcom.
When Taylor Nichols showed up on Friday Night Lights as Lyla's good-natured step-dad, I was so excited. But then they gave him absolutely nothing to do (like, maybe 5 lines total). It was very frustrating.
You are not alone. That's my favorite too.
Charley gets great again in her post-8th-Doctor stories.
I think the problem was that people who vote in DOCTOR WHO MAGAZINE polls were the only ones watching by then, so most people didn't see McCoy at all, let alone have an opinion on him.
Her book is coming next year!
Together at last, just like they were in the movie 14 years ago.
My mom loves that movie. This is the first reference to it I've ever seen in the wild.