he is a self-employed proletariat, he is way better than class traitor potter
Oh come on now.
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Petite-Bourgeois: If owning a business automatically classifies you for this class, fine. However, he only has 2 employees: himself, and his dog. Which would classify him much more as a freelancer that labels himself as a business. Plus, the entire impetuous of A Grand Day Out was they didn't have enough cash to take an actual trip for their vacation.
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Imperialist: Being a semi-shitty tourist on land whose only inhabitant was a decommissioned tourism robot for a day constitutes as imperialism now? I must have forgotten the part where he established a permanent second home on the moon and forced the robot to be its groundskeeper under threat of breaking off its solar panels.
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Landlord: He's short on cash and rents out a room in his own fucking house to someone off the street. And proceeds to let the tenant run the entire house almost completely unopposed. Feathers McGraw was more of a roommate from hell than tenant.
Wallace is prole and I will not hear otherwise.
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The true leftist Overwhelmingly British Thing is The Young Ones.
"Darling fascist bully boy, give me some more money, you bastard. May the seed of your loins be fruitful in the belly of your woman, Neil."
On the subject of Chapo chat:
Neil: Wow, that's really bad
Rik: Bad for society when the kids get into it!
So, did the pointless new movie series forget about the whole never-actually-mentioned-or-shown-in-the-books deal about Dumbledore being gay for Grindelwald that JK Rowling desperately wanted pats on the back for because big movie studios are afraid to have gay characters in big family popcorn movies OR was it because JK Rowling was a huge bigoted dickhead all along
spoiler
It's probably both
The "Became a bara fluffy were rabbit" awoken some deep suppressed memories from childhood
technically if you consider the Fantastic Beast And Where To Find Them sequels (since they're in the same universe), we'll have 10 movies (13 total once they're all done apparently)
7 overrated live-action movies. The one directed by Cuarón is pretty good actually.
They're saying that, although there were 8 movies, only 7 are overrated
Okay. That could have been better communicated by combining the sentences with a subordinating conjunction.
If you really want to watch a show about a magic school in Britain, Little Witch Academia is far better and Akko stands in solidarity with the school's workers.
Something about the stop motion creeped me out as a kid and I found it unnerving. Same reason I couldn't enjoy Chicken Run
It must be the uncanny valley effect, i felt the same about some early 3d animation in cartoons