I once saw a slogan on a button at a street vendor in Washington D.C. “Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong?” It’s stuck with me after two decades.
I once saw a slogan on a button at a street vendor in Washington D.C. “Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong?” It’s stuck with me after two decades.
I was not ready for hot goth Girlfield today.
It still works on Firefox and Chrome. If it’s not working, the likely culprit is Hardware Acceleration needs to he turned off, which you can also do on both browsers.
Why is Amy standing in for Leeloo instead of Leela?
Damn. I thought it was to get around copyright bots.
Yeah. How small are they if we turn their ashes into synthetic diamonds?
Seems more like a shower thought than a dad joke.
Agreed. People being awful in theaters has been a long-standing subject of countless jokes. It’s not in any way a new phenomenon. “Please silence your phone” adverts after the trailers happened long before Covid came around.
Only thing I thought was a painful cliche in the movie was the “no, I won’t kill the villain (after mowing down all of his minions like they were nothing) because I’m the good guy!” trope.
Aright, I’ll admit, that got an audible guffaw out of me.
“Maybe I can sneak under it and the bridge won’t notice!”
The sons had their wives too.
Still a lotta first cousin fuckin’ goin’ on though in the next generation.
Someone else flipped the ending.
No, because their knowledge of Achilles likely solely comes from that movie, where Patroclus is his “cousin.”
It’s sad that they really can’t seem to get away from “guy with the same powers, but evil!” rut for antagonists in superhero movies. And seriously, the “my family makes me strong, not weak!” cliche too?
It’s an animated Star Wars series that takes place between the Original trilogy and the Prequel ones, closer to the Original, largely focused on the rise of the Rebel Alliance by following the crew of one Rebel starship.
Topographically speaking, we are donuts.
Really? The U.S. version must be less than an hour long then, since that’s like, the entire second act of the movie.
I don’t get it? What’s DC in this context?
If I order boneless wings, I know that they’re not made from the wing of a chicken, but they goddamn better be boneless, and saying that “boneless wings is not a guarantee that they are in fact boneless” goes against every linguistic and culinary expectation about that item. I agree with the dissent.