A couple of buddy cops, some badass action, a sinister villain, and black face. If that list doesn't get you insanely excited, then you obviously missed it when It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia aired their unofficial sequel to the Mel Gibson/Danny Glover blockbuster action franchise in Lethal Weapon 5. As soon as it was announced that they'd follow up that sequel with another sequel, I started counting down the days until The Gang Makes Lethal Weapon 6. And the episode is absolutely everything that sort of anticipation deserves.
How I Met Your Mother has never really been a show to throw cliff-hangers our way. It's happened occasionally at the end of a season, as is true with most sitcoms, but that's about it. That being said, the end of last week's episode was definitely meant to have everyone on the edge of their seats. Aside from Ted meeting the mother, the biggest story so far this season has been Marshall finding a way to break the news to Lily that he's going to be a judge. With the end of last week's episode leading us to believe she now knew, there wasn't much question that was going to be the focus of this episode, but fortunately for us, instead of watching Marshall endure her wrath, we got to see everyone attempt to keep Marshall's secret safe in the funniest ways they could devise.
A lone bluebird, separated from its mate, its flock, and the weather it deserves, serves as a prevalent symbol in Lance Edmands' Bluebird. It's as if all the characters are that feathered friend, away from where they should be, but stuck having to deal with circumstances beyond their control.
Even more than ghosts and provocative costumes, Halloween has become marked by its unoriginality. Year after year, people dress up as the same generic things. I'm no exception to this. As a child I was Zorro 7 times. While Zorro is totally awesome, and I loved wearing a mask and a cape, a little variety would have been nice.
Charlie Kelly has always been known as one of the least-intelligent characters on television. The jokes about his illiteracy and failure to understand the world have been some of the funniest It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia cranks out, and they've been flying at us ever since season 1. But how would the Gang, and the show, change if Charlie wasn't at the bottom of the IQ charts? What if there was a way for him to be more than just average, but actually become a genius? Well that's what the show explores with Flowers For Charly, I mean, Flowers For Charlie.
Here at We Got This Covered, we bring you the biggest movie news every day, all year round. It isn't every day though that we bring you a mere tiptoe of news, but when that tiptoe is about something as big as an R-rated movie for everyone's favorite Merc with a Mouth, well then it's definitely worth discussing. In a recent interview, Ryan Reynolds spoke about the long-awaited Deadpool movie, saying that in the last few weeks the film has take a "few very, very small tiptoes forward."
This is an exciting time to be a Marvel fan. Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. is in full swing, Thor: The Dark World is headed to theaters shortly, Phase Three plans are falling into place, and now, the very first trailer for Captain America: The Winter Soldier has hit the web, arriving on the heels of the great poster that was released earlier in the week and the two photos that we saw yesterday.
So far, the best part of the Thor: The Dark World press junket has definitely been all the information that's been revealed about future Marvel projects, courtesy of studio president Kevin Feige. The goods just come on coming this week, as today we've got big news about both Ant-Man and a Black Panther movie.
For the last 8 years, beneath all the other fluff, all the flair, and all the laughs, How I Met Your Mother has been about one thing: watching Ted Mosby try to get laid and laughing at the poor decisions which keep him from succeeding. Tonight's episode, Knight Vision, brings that story right out into the open, giving us a night where all Ted wants to do is have a good time with a girl charmed by the wedding bells, but instead continually makes poor decision after poor decision.