zorrocat310
AlienJesusRedux
zorrocat310

TRT-X I just saw your post.

Who wore it better?

Well I guess we can we can strike him off the list for a film about Olympic Ice Skaters

Let every fart count as a peal of thunder for liberty. Let every fart remind the nation of how much it has let pass out of its control. It is a small gesture, but one that can be very effective - especially in a large crowd. So fart, and if you must, fart often. But always fart without apology. Fart for freedom, fart

The casting of Charles Dance as the elder Mountbatten was inspired casting. In appearance both are shockingly similar, But I was stunned by the sympathy the show was slathering on Mountbatten as clearly Caroline was. It felt dishonest, and I cannot believe the retribution was merely a scold by the Queen. Maybe that’s

Maybe it was all a publicity stunt? Would any of us here even be thinking about Sonic The Hedgehog when there are so many other pressing issues to consider?

Yes, I am certain you are correct. And before Churchill you have to go back to the the 1930s.

There was so much being thrown at us tonight that I am not sure much of it was effective. Certainly the reveal of Mrs. Coulter as Lyra’s mom. But it doesn’t explain much to my mind her malevolence and domination of Lyra. I have seen nothing maternal in Mrs. Coulter and if having Lyra on her side is a priority, why

Thanks for clearing that up, that makes a bit more sense.

That’s a take I understand as seen through the eyes of the Monarchy. But for the Queen and Philip to so misread the collective grief of England, if not all together the World, spoke volumes of an insulation and lack of awareness that came from years of creating a firewall on matters of the public. The death of Diana

Google Harold Wilson and Queen Elizabeth. They evidently grew very close and had each other’s confidence.

Full confession. This definitely fell into my life is stranger than fiction file. When the episode first cut to the nun, I thought Mother Teresa? In Greece?

I VEHEMENTLY DISAGREE WITH THE LIST AND HERE ARE 99 REASONS WHY:

I thought this episode touched on the same issues as THE QUEEN starring Helen Mirren, and that is an utter lack of empathy. Ignoring the physical exercise of tearing, I think it demonstrated that Elizabeth was raised and expected to be a stolid figure head, that in some way, as if ordained by God to keep a stiff upper

I knew that but Joelle said Mars and I didn’t want to be rude.

This is my favorite episode of the first three. Some fine answers and yes all the shenanigans of Veidt’s were in fact practice to get to the surface of the Mars moon. But I just reveled in the chemistry of Tim Blake Nelson and Paula Malcomson, two pros that had me held completely in watching them deliver great work.

There is definitely a charisma hole in the casting of Ben Daniels as Tony Armstrong-Jones. That guy was strikingly handsome, a superb photographer, well spoken and as a “team”, he and Margaret really turned eyes. Margaret may have had moments of refreshingly risque candor, but she certainly was more than that. Margare

Caroline I completely agree with your review but I would have been far harsher. I was not prepared for three historically significant issues of the 1960s to be given so little attention. The death of Churchill proved a global event, his state funeral proved Britain’s most recognized observations for a non-royal of the

Kanye turned*** into Johnny Cash so slowly I hadn’t noticed.

When I first heard “Macklunkey”, it sounded like the name of a guy who always got picked last for Dodge Ball in school.