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Great Random
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But it's sad that I can't vote up the grade, and this review.

Baby, if you've ever wondered,
Wondered whatever became of me . . .

The section where the two wastrels go off to find some chowder is hilarious.

The premise of the movie isn't bad. The cliched characters hurt it. I could see a "mystery trip" with Christian youth which would explore the surreal currents of every-day life while remaining clean and faith-based.

Gee, nobody mentioned the movie of "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix." I hated the whole idea of school dances — stupid frivolity. The Potter movie offered the only good reason for having one in that it strengthened Neville.

There are two ways of representing magic in movies or literature. One is "They took a magic elevator which opened on Park Avenue." Magic is a plot device, nothing more. You see a lot of this in the Harry Potter movies. There is also "There was magic, and they wondered." I think "Prisoner" handled this well with

Glad to meet you, Congressman.

YouTube has two bad copies and a good copy synched to "Wake Up."

I'd say, rather, a fine white wine.

Herman and Katnip is worse.

It's an allusion to the guest at a hotel stealing all its linen. Like the cartoon of the woman examining the host's towels, labeled VICTORIA HOTEL: "Perhaps it was her maiden name?"

And the foal of the one he rides in "Herr Meets Hare."

Five reasons why, and they're all spelled m-o-n-e-y.

With _one_ exception: the Robert Mackimson cartoon where Daffy caught the Tasmanian Devil. Mackimson could be awful, but that one time he had it.

I'd urge you to remember Jones's less well-known shorts before you count his best. There's one with a squirrel and a coconut. And "Water, Water, Every Hare." And one with a mangy old cat trying to get a bird (there's one sequence which parodies Disney perfectly).

I think the Heckle and Jeckle opera short was good. There are some lousy ones, but opera parodies often bring out the best in cartoons.

. . . "And dis time, we didn't forget the gravy!"

So it's "The Grand Budapest Hotel" without atmosphere, characters, or cuisine?

Once a student has mastered the Address, he or she can go on to our wonderful and baffling constitution.

Through an office building, leaving you beside the road.