Hey Girl! Aren't you a music fan? Well then why are you breaking my records?
Hey Girl! Aren't you a music fan? Well then why are you breaking my records?
Hahaha it's Kirsten Dunst. Years ago the girls over at Go Fug Yourself realized that her name anagrams to Dr SunkenTits and now that's all I can ever think of her as.
You're review is bad and you should feel bad.
I saw it like 600 years ago in a book when I was time traveling.
This might shock you, but cops also found weed in the car.
Just your first run-in? Don't be coy. Your thirty-third run-in is still the talk of the Lower East Side.
I'd consider that entire show a minor disaster.
If their culture was not advance enough to defend against our own superior jumping left and right technology, then they deserved to be liberated of their gold coins and slaughtered!
My introduction to them went quite smoothly.
While this would technically be the "second encounter" between the Omicronians and Earth in the Futurama series, I'd still cast my vote for "The Problem with Popplers."
Three words:
Vogon Constructor Fleet.
Ahh yes, our disastrous first encounter with Italians.
All of humanity thrust into an apocalyptic war with aliens we can't even begin to compromise with. Humanity turns to extreme facism to survive. Starship Troopers!
They had a lot of brains, and they had a lot of balls, but they couldn't handle a Bender.
I think Wrathoise put it best by saying that it works on both levels, the naturalistic idea that it's about the evil that men do and the supernatural idea that there is something even worse behind ordinary human horrors.
Despite its heavy references to a 19th century work of horror, True Detective does not appear on its surface to be…
Some fantastic thoughts. I too think there is something supernatural lurking behind the surface, although I'm not sure I fully go along with your full thesis, but it is a good one.
There's nothing at all tragic about this film! Though I don't think the method described therein is an effective means of "cutting us free from history," it certainly works as a beautiful metaphor, and makes for a very clever little bit o' film-making. A world forced to look to the future instead of inevitably…
Yes.