annakarina1
beatrice3000
annakarina1

Yeah, it isn’t bad, but it took me out of the movie whenever he went on rants and I felt like the movie stopped to let him do his standup routine.

Yeah, Huxley had tracked her down, but the movie dropped some of the subplot, so there wasn’t a solid conclusion to it.

He leapt into the body of a 1960s mobster who was fluent in Italian, and Sam didn’t know Italian, but Al did and fed him lines to say while he was in conversation with an Italian-speaking crime boss.

Thanks for this explanation. I stopped watching the series after Seed of Chucky, because I just found it incredibly dumb. And I really liked Bride of Chucky out of the series, for the great chemistry between Brad Dourif and Jennifer Tilly as Chucky and Tiffany; the use of Rob Zombie music in two scenes; and Jennifer

I heard of Stanton through watching that film as a teen, and I was captivated by his performance, and the sadness and depth of the film. I wasn’t sure exactly why I connected with it, but I thought it was an incredible film.

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I am sorry to hear that Harry Dean Stanton has just died. He had a long and successful career as a character actor in films, and I became a fan of him as a teen from Paris, Texas. This film just struck me as very raw and heartfelt, and just drew me in. I am not good at really describing it well, but Stanton’s

This is really insensitive and narrow-minded of you to insult Dame Darcy’s work as “creepy” and Frances Bean Cobain for having a lock of her late father’s hair in a piece of art. Have some perspective and grow up.

That reminds me of seeing The Rocketeer as a kid and being impatient for the flight scenes. I found it really boring and shut it off. I tried it again as an adult, knowing to take my time, and still found it boring. Ah well.

I was telling my friend/ex-boyfriend how I really liked Samantha Mathis when I was a kid, despite that she never became a big breakout star, and he said he liked her from Pump Up the Volume. He goes “You know why?” And me, knowing his type of humor, I said, “Because she showed her breasts?” “Yes.”

I liked most of Explorers, up until they reach the alien planet. I mostly liked it because I liked watching a movie about kids being creative, talking about science, and building things together. The finale on the alien planet got way too ridiculous and cartoonish, and distracted by the relatively good pace of the

I heard of it about five years ago, and watched it online. I thought it was decent, and I mostly was affected by the scenes where he reunites with his family, seeing how much older they got, and them in disbelief that he still is the same age after eight years of being missing. The flight scenes were fun, but Paul

I got Sleepwalkers, a 1992 horror movie that, when I looked it up, stars Brian Krause (Leo from Charmed), Madchen Amick (Twin Peaks), Ron Perlman, and Stephen King and Clive Barker in acting roles. I’m game for it. :)

Wow, that’s like when I listened to H. Jon Benjamin on Aisha Tyler’s podcast and realized he was much funnier when he’s following a script than being himself. He was telling a story, but kept getting sidetracked or interrupting himself, saying stuff like “Yeah, I know, right?” and barely finishing the story. He

Conan was OK. it wasn’t great, but it wasn’t horrible. It was a fun popcorn movie, and Jason Momoa seemed like he was having fun playing Conan, as well as the kid playing the child version of him in the beginning.

I agree. I saw the film yesterday, and while I loved the visuals, spooky vibe, and Jessica Chastain’s performance, the story itself isn’t that interesting. I felt underwhelmed by it, it just didn’t feel intriguing. I used to be into gothic horror, and I like Del Toro’s movies, so I was psyched for this, but I felt

I thought it was fun, too. The death scene where the woman gets her face dunked in liquid nitrogen, then her face is smashed to bits was great for a horror death scene. And Blockbuster Buster pointed out that they cast two actresses from Andromeda and did a role reversal of their known roles from the show, making it

I remember Family Dog when it aired as a TV series in the early 90’s. I really liked it, but it didn’t last long. When I saw the Amazing Stories episode a few years ago, it took me a while to figure out why I had deja vu watching it, I had totally forgotten about the show. I like the TV show more because the family

I didn’t know The Doll was a Richard Matheson story. It was one of the best episodes of the series, and John Lithgow excelled in playing a man who could come off as creepy/weird, but instead was likable and sympathetic.

My brother brought up this episode after we saw Unbroken. Most of the movie was bad, but there is a really good WWII-era dogfight scene with fighter jets that was remiscient of that episode.

The 1980s Twilight Zone episodes were pretty good. Not on the level on classic ones of the original, but I still liked the reboot and thought there were memorable episodes in it (scientists communicating with the hologram of a ghost woman seen at different ages; an 80’s teen boy and a 1700s teen girl communicating