Is Robocop nearly as beloved though? It's a cult classic, sure, but it mostly falls in the "It's yet another 80s action flick, not as good as the original" well that the Total Recall reboot did.
Is Robocop nearly as beloved though? It's a cult classic, sure, but it mostly falls in the "It's yet another 80s action flick, not as good as the original" well that the Total Recall reboot did.
Yeah, it was quite something when Axe, who frequently is among the mellowist of podcast hosts, was utterly exasperated in having to explain to Stewart what the spending clause means for fixing infrastructure. It's really typical of one of my bigger problems with Stewart: Once you get past the "Uggh, those hypocrites!"…
And, of course, previously played Doomsday as a Jekyll/Hyde type figure back on Smallville…though it turned out his human half was also evil, hilariously murdering Daily Planet photographer Jimmy Olson, except it turned out that he wasn't the real Jimmy Olson, that was his younger cousin who was given his camera at…
Or just give him his Fargo accent. He pulled that off, damn it! (And was so goddamn disgusting I've had a hard time watching him in anything since. Good performance, but the character itself was the height of toxic masculinity, to the point it was almost nauseating to watch him onscreen.)
"Little Man Tate? Well this big man hate!" - Keith Jackson : https://www.youtube.com/wat…
You mean Death to Smoochy?
Yeah, I was kind of surprised they skipped over Operation RYAN entirely.
Somehow, the followup single Pac-Man Dysentery was never a hit.
The Onion, 1939: "Why Does Our Joyless President Never Dance?"
Depends on the haircut.
And isn't the dancing thing a product of devestating knee injuries? It's like expecting Bill Walton and Bo Jackson to throw a dance party.
Yeah, that was a a black comic undertone to the very serious scene, Elizabeth angrily telling her that she had to keep doing everything she hated her for doing.
If we know anything, it's that his subconscious has a hint about who's taking the beer, but he won't figure it out himself for another two years.
I love how even in the midst of all these intense character moments, there's a little undercurrent of black humor. I mean, Gabriel essentially gets a speech that boils down to "Agents today, they don't know how lucky they have it! Back in my day, we had to carry out Stalin's purges, kill our own best friends, ten…
Yeah, it's not like there's a President who relied on small donors to raise a shit ton of money and had humongous rallies. Schmobama or something.
Because Reagan A) Did it on the eve of the convention, not right before he'd get eliminated B) He did it with the clear goal of prying the VP's delegation into his camp, which might have put him over the top and C) It was part of a broader gambit to force Ford to name a VP, which might have alienated conservative…
I thought Seth Meyers probably gave the best one since Colbert, but he also had a big juicy target in the front row with Trump that year. Wilmore I thought was more cutting than funny. He got the mean, but unlike Colbert, the underlying jokes just weren't that good, and the nervous delivery in parts didn't help.
I'm excited to see if they can top the terrible roster construction of the original. Muggsy Bogues is your only perimiter player, Danny DeVito? Picking Sean Bradley? Monstars deserved to lose.
And, of course, there are people out there that might want to kill (or kidnap) them, just because of who their father is. One thing West Wing got right: https://www.youtube.com/wat…
According to the Sanders campaign, yes. Deep South. Like Connecticut and Arizona.