Another nice episode.
I really liked the idea of it (getting blackmailed and not knowing what your blackmailer actually wants) and the plot twist at the end was great! I honestly didn't expect that. By now I'm used to paying attention and I usually have a lot of theories and try to find subtle clues, but somehow I didn't see that one coming. I was so naive and thought the main character was really just masturbating. I just started to get skeptical when he even agreed to rob a bank, but I still couldn't figure out what's exactly going on.
By the way, if you rewatch the beginning you might notice the scene with the little girl which seems creepy in retrospect. But at that point I really thought it was to show that he's just a nice young guy.
Well done. Another plot twist I haven't seen coming like that. And of course the acting was incredible again :)
Glee makes no sense anymore. Sue is the biggest Klaine shipper? Seriously? Rachel and Sam? For real? And what the hell did they do to Beiste? I am sick of this nonstop changing of the personality of characters. Remember when Sam used to be smart? Or when Beiste said: "Deep down inside, where no-one can see, I'm just a girl."? Or that time when Schue did know Spanish? I feel like the writers got too lazy to come up with scenes that are actually funny and not a complete nonsense. I am so glad that this season is a short one and - thank God - the final one.
Yes, I can stop watching it, but I've put up with it for so long that now I have to finish it.
Good movie until the plot twist. After that everything changes... to worst.
They tried too hard at the end, the last 15 minutes feel like they belong to an completely different film. But besides that "10 Cloverfield Lane" is a decent and mysterious sequel to a surprisingly good film.
(And like others mentioned here before, it's better to watch it without knowing anything about; e.g. trailers, but actually that should count for every movie...right?)
I didn't have any expectations before watching this movie and I hadn't read the book(still haven't ,still not going to)and to me this was all very average.
This movie reminded me of two other movies.Those movies are both superior to this one,and it only reminds me of them because of the whole ''There's someone that has gone through some type of injury and they need an assistant to help them''thing.Those 2 movies are ''The Intouchables (2011)'' and a Swedish movies called ''Ego (2013)'' and both of them are really quite good.
Emilia Clarke did a great job and her character is very likable from the very start.Her smile is adorable and I think she's a really good actress in general.
In the very beginning I wasn't feeling Will and Lou's relationship at all and I was honestly shipping her more with Nathan.Of course she had a boyfriend that I wasn't really very fond of.Patrick was a bit annoying and when he gave Lou a necklace with HIS NAME on it I just kind of lost it...what is she?property?No thank you dude,I'll pass.The only time where I really felt for Patrick was when he found out about the trip ,the uh.."business trip" ,I completely understand why he got mad.
The biggest reason why I give this movie a 6 and not anything higher is because there's something missing.I can't quite put my finger on it but there's just something that just makes this movie kind of "meh" to me.I think it might be Sam Claflin,I don't think he's a bad actor but I don't think he fits the role very well.
I got kind of irritated at the fact that she was always saying both his first AND last name,it's so cringey ,but that's probably just me.
I'm glad he ended up dying,I know that sound horrible but if he would magically just get better and start walking again that would just be way too cliché and I'm so glad that didn't happen.Is a life with just a little joy and a great deal of pain really so much better than no life at all?maybe not,it really depends.
Just like a guy suddenly going blind,he knows what he lost and knowing what you can't have is certainly much worse than not having it in the first place.To live your life in a wheelchair when you know there's so much more out there is a major restraint and for some people it just isn't worth it.
Would I recommend it?not really.Watch it if you want to,maybe you'll love it or maybe you won't but those are my thoughts about it anyway,if that helps.
One of the best movies that Disney has made. The visuals and animation is incomparable to any studio (except Disney itself with Pixar) and the story is so well balanced, with (meta-)comedy and drama/suspense mixed so well together. The voice actors really makes you believe in a world where animals can be anthropomorphic and live in a society. A must-watch for children but also anyone who appreciate the beauty of animated storytelling.
This is pretty bad for a "scary" movie. Everything was so predictable and any scary parts were due to random crap jumping out with loud music playing. This is a joke of a scary movie. If you want to be really scared, go watch Event Horizon late at night.
This show is so fucking dumb but I can't stop watching it because I'm in love with Rita Volk.
This was the perfect adaptation for The Jungle Book! The voice actors were absolutely stellar and brought so much credibility to the CGI-characters. The VFX itself is a contender (and I hope the winner) at the Oscars 2017. The scenarios were tear-dropping to the eyes (in the good way) and the animals were portrayed with so much detail that makes you wanna live with panthers, bears and wolves!
Overall, I consider this another success from Disney that rebooted this so well!
'I Am The One Who Knocks'
Am I the only one who thinks it was Teresa's brother?
120 minutes of jokes, pop culture references and free violence. This could be 120 minutes Deadpool standup.
This is the best season so far. It was bloody intense (I'm not saying the other ones were not) They obviously gave women a big role, at the plot and to the actresses. I can't say it's a surprise that Claire leaves Frank, to be honest, I really liked their relationship since Chapter 1. They seems to complete each other for many episodes. But it also looks like a flat line, no emotions, just interests of both parts to gain power. This season showed it perfectly, and Frank said it to Claire in a ruthless way. -I must say, Frank Underwood is an awful character, but somehow I like him. It's different and mean. So is Claire, she's classy, strong and independent, that's why she took her decision and I hope she keeps it. I guess we will see how the Underwood ship sinks next season... Or maybe not?
Correction: Carmilla Season ZERO. It's not a whole new season, it's just featured special episodes.
Visually really stunning — the pictures are an hode to Saul Leiter — but story wise a bit longpasted. The acting is perfect though.
I can't believe in what I just saw. At each word that these state men issued, my anger just grew.
I can't believe in what I just saw. At each word that these state men issued, my anger just grew.
I'm really sick of the whole "porn is evuuuuhl" angle that this film was pursuing. All I saw was a bunch of nice but not very smart girls making some bad decisions and then blaming everybody but themselves afterwards - one went as far as to compare herself to a rape victim because she voluntarily took part in a scene she later regretted.
I got mad more at the weak support networks those girls had than the porn industry, the worst people in the whole film were one girl's family and friends - her obese mother and "music producer"(read: umemployed) boyfriend making her feel like shit and pressuring her into stopping her career, essentially calling her a prostitute as insult and her boyfriend not even defending her when people at a university party were making fun of her and looking up her porn.
This film glossed over some real questionable practices in porn and instead just highlighted that yes, a lot of 18 to 25 year old girls make mistakes and don't think things through. Hell, one of them thought she couldn't get pregnant if guys pulled out.
Man, these cops. Not good.
All I can say is they really fucked this guy over. Seeing these cops and lawyers take advantage of his fucking stupid nephew angers me too. God, I'm pissed at the kid for not knowing better too and falling for their dirty tricks.
WTF??? I'm obviously not anywhere near the end yet and have zero knowledge of this case before this series, so I have no idea how it turned out -- but regardless of whether Steven Avery actually did murder this woman or not, I hope they fired EVERYONE in the Manitowoc County Sheriff's Department and cancelled out their pensions, and that this Len Kachinsky joker was disbarred. Wow. This is beyond a comedy of errors, because so much of this was willful and deliberate and done with malice. Ughhh it's sickening.
God bless the super trashy show that was my first exposure to queer people like me c:
Fuck. Felix is such a sweetheart! but as much as I like him I'm not here for this. I ship Karmy too much
The thing that really bothers me about this show is the fact that the word "bisexual" just doesn't exist.
Since season 1 we're wondering about Amy's sexuality and it's totally fine she hasn't figured it out yet. But in this episode Karma once again reminded Amy that she apparently likes boys as much as she likes girls. And the only word that ever comes up is "confused".
Why is the word "bisexual" so non-existing in every media? It's not even about defining Amy's sexuality. It's about the fact that this show tries to be different, understanding and open to everything (They added polygamy and monogamy, and they even included an intersexual character!), but in the end it's just about being gay or straight with nothing in between. Again.
Oh, and as a side note: I find it absolutely awful that the only actual lesbian (Reagan) is portrayed as bi-phobic. (But even SHE doesn't use the bad b-word!)
The thing that really bothers me about this show is the fact that the word "bisexual" just doesn't exist.
Since season 1 we're wondering about Amy's sexuality and it's totally fine she hasn't figured it out yet. But in this episode Karma once again reminded Amy that she apparently likes boys as much as she likes girls. And the only word that ever comes up is "confused".
Why is the word "bisexual" so non-existing in every media? It's not even about defining Amy's sexuality. It's about the fact that this show tries to be different, understanding and open to everything (They added polygamy and monogamy, and they even included an intersexual character!), but in the end it's just about being gay or straight with nothing in between. Again.
Oh, and as a side note: I find it absolutely awful that the only actual lesbian (Reagan) is portrayed as bi-phobic. (But even SHE doesn't use the bad b-word!)
"I got a bad feeling about this flight." - Hurley LMFAO!
Tatiana Maslany is so underrated, what a brilliant actress.
Am I the only one? I find the drugs in drink, sex, blackmail subplot extremely cringeworthy. I hope they don't make a love story out of it. What a way to romanticise abuse.
There's no moral ambiguity, drugging someone to sleep with you is pure evil and wrong, even if he did it for something he might regard as noble reasons... well let's see how it turns out.
Best show on MTV right now which is not saying MUCH, but at least something!