telling YouTube TV subscribers that it has offered the same “reasonable” terms under the current agreement for renewal to the OTT company and wants to continue the agreement. Customers are advised to cast YouTube from another device to their Roku box should Roku pull the app. The company is...
Toward the beginning of The Lost World: Jurassic Park, the 1997 sequel to the classic Steven Spielberg film Jurassic Park, Jeff Goldblum’s character Ian Malcolm delivers one of the franchise’s most iconic lines. “Yeah. ‘Ooh, ah,’ that's how it always starts,” he tells his more ...
This guy is pretty much the Kevin Bacon of the Internet having himself or his website somehow associated with Ask A Ninja, Rifftrax, TVTropes, Dragonball Abridged, Awesome Video Games, Press Start, Honest Movie Trailers, How It Should Have Ended, ZTV and even more I'll mention later. The...
There were many reasons why the film made a big splash, and the makers relied on similar tropes in the series, too. Thanks to the episodic format, a lot of subplots have been added to the original narrative to flesh out various characters, in addition to the central trio, in depth. ...
You are that new kid, no one is talking to you because you are so shy, and the idea of walking through the cafeteria was terrifying. Is like the shot in [“Me and Earl”], that's exactly the feeling. You had to cross Washington Square Park to get to the other place. As I was...
Coming up with a series finale that wraps up loose ends, completes character arcs and answers lingering questions in an original, satisfying, thought-provoking fashion that doesn’t resort to tired tropes, stays true to the show’s roots and appeases legions of fans is a Herculean task. And...
but it is non-intrusive. Kiera’s main weapon is not her suit, but her ability to insinuate herself into the Vancouver Police Department and use police strategies to track down her targets. The story definitely relies on the tropes of future-tech, but it’s not overused, nor is it ever...
the slate of new programs is full of imagination, albeit sporadically ridiculous imagination. Viewers are about to meet fairy tale creatures, sadomasochistic ghosts, pissed-off dinosaurs, and scantily-clad bunnies, along with more generic offerings that upgrade familiar tropes with solid casting and ...
Verdict:The ’60s is a pretty common period for TV, so it’s no surprise that the cars, costumes, and soundtrack all add up. There’s also an intriguing spin on time-travel tropes: The universe “pushes back” when Franco tries to alter history by throwing literal fire on his plans....
Primeval: New Worldis staunchly a genre series, complete with clunky dialogue and half-baked ideas of time travel. In fact, the show manages to combine practically all genre tropes into one: there’s paranormal activity, time travel, hard boiled cops, crime scene investigations, inept government...