? R-rated movies typically have a much harder time making money than PG-13s.
? R-rated movies typically have a much harder time making money than PG-13s.
As a huge fan of Cemetery Man, I thought Dylan Dog was a crime. Not a cool crime, either, like robbery. More like one of those "crimes against humanity"-style crimes. Seriously, it was a mess, and the writing was terrible.
Zombieland is the microwaved leftovers of stuff like Shaun of the Dead and I am constantly perplexed why other zombie fans like it so much.
The third one's good, too, if a step down. But the second's just a disaster. That series is a textbook case of:
It definitely gets dropped here a lot. I feel like its use here has exploded recently, too. A couple weeks ago it was used by two different writers in the same feature. It's threatening to take over "nadir."
I know! When the military usually makes such impeccable decisions when it comes to protecting civilians, I just couldn't buy that at all.
God, that's a weight off my shoulders.
Paranormal romance had already started to take off by the time Twilight rolled in though, right? But I think I'd agree that Twilight's a huge factor in why paranormal dominates YA these days.
The Union Square B&N is the fucking flagship store. I saw Neal Stephenson, Chuck Palahniuk, Terry Pratchett, and Salman Rushdie speak there over the span of a year or two. Definitely worth keeping up on their reading schedule.
*tumbleweed rolls by*
Damn. She's going to be crushed.
Agree. I watched it again recently just to make sure I wasn't once more being tricked by that idiot Past Ed, and while I didn't like it as much as when I was in high school, I still had a good time.
They'd like to think they are.
Well said.
I remember there being some explanation of how they cover it up, but I have already forgotten what it was.
Aye!
The Tulane stuff really is the rug that ties the room together on this one. Frankly, it's hard to see Shark Night 3D existing without it.
Nobody who dislikes "The Principle and the Pauper" gives a shit about "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes" because that was from season 12. Everything had changed by then.
Yeah, @avclub-0f0d67e214f9fef69b278e3d08114da9:disqus , but it indicts us all for liking Homer and the town up until now. Not to get all melodramatic—which is impossible, because The Simpsons is the universe, right?—but that means we have to choose between agreeing with Grimes and condemning Homer or admitting we're…
I know it's just an opinion, but yours is wrong.