Vaaldor
Vaaldor
Vaaldor

I remember seeing that, but I didn't catch that they fell short of the prize requirements. I was kind of wondering why this new video was being posted.

Also in my shortlist of funniest movies ever.

If physical copies don't make sense to you, that is a completely legitimate argument as to why you would never buy a physical copy. But there is a large segment of the population that still likes to be able to hold a physical disc in their hands.

The point he is trying to make is that he shouldn't have to spend $100 on a box set and then buy the same movies over again just so he can watch a digital copy. I would be more inclined to agree with you if this involved going from a VHS to a DVD or a DVD to a bluray. In those instances, you are buying a new, physical

I was about to disagree with you based on the gif, but then I read the text and now I whole-heartedly agree.

I'll agree with the "small doses" comment. Kind of like how Jack Black was everywhere for a while and now people have gotten sick of him. At this point, the only time I see either actor is in a movie made by their friends.

It's just kind of implied. Though maybe they should add the disclaimer. Kind of like how you shouldn't have to be told that coffee is hot, you shouldn't have to be told not to go to an Uwe Boll movie, but that doesn't stop people from burning themselves or watching one.

I had to keep reminding myself to breathe while watching this (because it is harrowing, not because I thought I was in space).

The Twilight Zone set (books and broken glasses) are awesome, but aside from "because we can," how can they justify charging $100 for that?

They claim that they used Christopher Reeve's Superman as the model for that Superman figure, but I don't buy it. That is clearly Adam Scott.

I knew it looked familiar. That was kind of a scary show. I saw a special about Jim Henson after he died and they showed a brief clip of a hedgehog-man transforming into a bunch of different shapes. That stuck with me for a while.

I was older when I first saw this, but I still think that Terry Gilliam has the ability to make genuinely creepy movies.

The episode with the fire spirit stands out most vividly to me. When you look into the heart of a fire as it is extinguished, a homicidal fire ghost is created, or something. Pretty silly looking back at it, but holy hell, as a kid that was crazy scary.

The Wizard of Oz. It may be more fantasy than sci-fi but I usually consider them to be pretty much the same thing. The witch was always scary to me, but what really got me was the scene where Dorothy is in the dungeon with the hourglass. I genuinely could not watch that scene.

My wife's young cousins got one of these sets a few years ago (literally a few years ago). It was unopened and in great condition but their mom went ahead and opened it for them. They played with it a few times and moved on. It must have been killing their dad as he is stereotypical geek that loves all things Star

I was starting to worry that nobody was going to post this. I swear that I used to own this (that is I remember playing with it), but I can't prove it as I don't have any specific memories of it and most of my toys from that era went missing. My parents probably talked me into selling them at a garage sale when I

That is a replica. From what I read on wikipedia, the original method of producing Damascus steel has been lost to time. Several attempts to replicate it created metal similar to that in the picture. The pattern is a result of carbon and folding the steel during the forging process.

I'm not sure how I pictured it, but definitely not the way they did it in the show. The dark handle with the white tip seemed off.

Full beard or nothing. Go big or go home.

Great. You took this movie that I was perfectly happy to dismiss as being everything that I see wrong with Hollywood (much like Battleship) and made me want to see it. It makes so much sense that this movie is really a conscious critique of the superhero-origin/summer-blockbuster genre rather than a clueless and