‘But it is not about me. I can’t lash out like some raging, entitled maniac. That’s a white man’s luxury’ - Stan Edgar -
A fun unique rom-com with good chemistry between Andy Samberg and Cristin Militoti.
A light, bright and tight rom-com!
I didn't expect to love this so much. I kept my expectations pretty low for this because of its repackaged Groundhog Day premise. All of my reservations were blown away by this movie's sheer brilliance. It is fun, cheesy and heartfelt in the best ways possible. With the pandemic going on for months, this movie brought in an air of freshness.
Just go ahead and watch this utter delight of a movie. One of the best rom-coms in recent film. Definitely the best to come out this year.
One of my biggest television pet peeves is when a character can explain a situation a trillion times better than they actually do - and they don’t. When they can very easily defend their actions, successfully and succinctly - and they don’t.
That was Hughie here. Frustrating to no end. Starlight doesn’t deserve you.
Rant over.
Wauw, that scene in the plane... Of all the superhero flicks I have ever seen nothing even comes close to this. And this for an ip that has existed since 2006... And from their standpoint... It's kinda made sense? The combination of these two things and the sheer brutality of it sets this show apart (there are more things ofcourse) from everything else.
Cried when Jeff hugged Abed twice, ugh he was the first friend Jeff ever made at Greendale and I'm just so sad it's over. #andamovie
Good episode. It was interesting to see Carmella's frustrations with Tony manifest themselves. The Davey business was tragic. The Richie stuff is moving along, and we're seeing how Janice is Lyvia Jr. Tony being scared and angry and then happy and then bonding with Meadow and kind of bonding with AJ was all interesting stuff. And Tony breaking the rules with the boat and knocking over the little guy is the show in a nutshell.
I just re-watched it, I totally missed the Captain America Elevator reference the first time.
Jessica is a selfish POS for the way she’s approaching Justin’s sobriety. It’s atrocious.
P.S. If that’s Justin in the casket six months later, I’m gonna be PISSED.
Superb. But why did Gabriel end up with $64k from Asher + $78k from Frank? Stonks :joy:
I've always dubbed this series as my go-to WTF series with all its twists and turns. But this finale is a firm end to what has been the mother of all roller coasters. Much kudos to Viola Davis for a stunning and electrifying performance from start to finish.
Well. I cried really hard at that.
This was one of the best series finale I ever watched. True, the show kind of lost itself a little bit in the last two seasons, but still was able to deliver some great moments. And this, this finale, OMG! I Loved it! It was so touching. Bonnie and Frank dying in Annalise's arms was one of the most sad moments of the series. What an actress! What a scene! The final scene, I get that some of you may find it was bad, or nonsense, but honestly, I couldn't ask for a better end to this journey. How to Get Away With Murder ended in the best possible way. It gave me chills.
When Annalise was 100% ready to destroy Michaela, I was 100% ready too.
Connor and Michaela having each other’s backs.. One of the best things this show has given us are the friendships that developed between the students.
The flashforwards, knowing this show, it’s probably not what it seems to be. It’s a big plan so they can all get out and finally be free. The one thing I hate is whenever something goes wrong in their lives, they turn the blame on Annalise, ugh. Connor had an Annalise moment in court, Y A SSS
This was funny as hell. I loved the monkey business. Best episode so far for me. I love the idiocy of Steve Carell's character against the scientists.
This was so funny that even the 2 line summary of the episode makes me laugh.
Summary: With his beloved satellite severely hobbled, General Naird must decide between a well-reasoned scientific solution and a chimp-led rescue operation.
A little disappointed that they are creating a whole new Sam-related story... I would rather something new.
That moment of silence was one of the strongest moments of this show! So powerful.
I love the show but I normally don't write reviews. I have to say that the guy acting as the father did a stellar job on the stand and annalise's closing argument was absolutely fantastic. I know I would go Looney if I was locked in a room for that long.
Annalise had so many good lines this episode:
- "You don’t have the right to mess with anyone else’s trauma."
- "It's all you. You're allowed to feel nothing. Forget all of this and just be where you are. Or we we can find him. I'll be here either way."
- "I'm trying to change the damn world here, literally! I'm Martin Luther damn King trying to blow up the entire justice system."
- "You don't have to touch it to know that."
Besides that the whole episode was really good. I'm just surprised the twin theory is already out of the window now. It seemed so legit and like something HTGAWM would totally do.
The episode was beautifully amazing.
I appreciated so much seeing the whole "gang" being emotional and go through a lot in this season and in particular during this episode when they announced A.Keating won the class action lawsuit. Yaay!
What I liked also is Frank Delfino going on Middleton's university tour and applying there to get his "second chance' that Keating said that everyone should get. Plus, of course Nate did NOT destroy the files Denver had and of course he looked into Bonnie's files lol.
This lays for all the new plots and events for the next season! And exactly who did Frank call at the end? Who's the kid that he seemed to recognise his name?
Did Laurel kill her mother? What were those scratches? The series did give many answers for what has been going on in this season but also we are left with so many other questions now.
Guess we'll have to wait till next season.
Shonda Rhimes delivers a great episode, once again.
Such an emotional episode, for a mid season finale this was outstanding. Definitely preferred it to season 3's, despite all mid season finales being amazing. Once again, Viola Davis is an absolute powerhouse when it comes to acting, she'll probably get an Emmy nomination for that ending scene alone.
HOLY FUCKING SHIT ANNALISE DID THAT. IM IN TEARS. THIS WHOLE EPISODE WAS SO EMOTIONAL AND WOW I DONT HAVE ANY WORDS
This show has gotten to be Breaking Bad good. Tell everyone you know about it because it needs way more hype!
This was a very good and dark episode. The brutality of having your own mentally il brother killed is on another level. That definitely scarred me.
Amazing episode. Simply amazing. Hearthbreaking, sad, exciting, thought-provoking... It left me dumb-founded for quite a long time, not cause of the surprise of it all but how heavy it weighs on the soul.
I never liked Wendy and I like her even less now. Give me the cold calculated emotional void of Marty over the manipulative, backstabbing sly fox that is Wendy.
Excellent acting from all of them though, especially Tom Pelphrey who will be missed.
At first I thought this episode just felt like a filler, but by the end my opinion couldn't have been more different.