I watched A Good Day To Die Hard last night.
I watched A Good Day To Die Hard last night.
Guys, stop with the arguing…let's hold hands in a circle and sing "Kumbaya"
A few episodes from now, we're going to revisit that kind of facial expression of emotion on Rygel, and that's a moment that clobbers me every time I watch through this series.
I wasn't bothered by there being no intelligent aliens, but I would've liked to have seen some critters.
Good question, I suppose - I hear a lot of spit-swapped anguish about the sorry state of retailers (physical media retailers in general, but comic shops specifically too), enough that I kind of assumed that there's something to it, but I don't know if the numbers really bear that out.
Corrected - possibly - in my original post.
I get the same shit with Dr. Who.
Yeah, that nobody noticed is the one thing that bugged me more than anything else in this movie.
It took getting used to (and not until after the movie) for sure.
Love the movie, learned to love the show, but for all the "Where's Firefly", I should think this is one of the last places where you'd have to tell people to Watch This.
Calgary.
FWIW, I imagine 10% is probably as good as it gets up here (Canada) due to close-enough exchange rates and US cover price on everything (at comic stores, anyway…you buy at Chapters, you pay Canadian cover price).
Titles aside, the comic shop I shop at has recently hit us with a revised pull-box agreement, and it's bugging me.
There would be some cruel justice to that, but man, I don't know where I could go where I couldn't find an awful act that lamentably made it big.
I can not only believe it, it makes me want to give Nick Cave a hug.
I don't know anything about the Flaming Lips.
Alberta? Probably end up being some goat-roper country shit, so in deference to that I'm gonna go with "Cowboys From Hell"
I liked it a lot…the only significant flaw for what it was going for was the persistently "digital backlot" look to it. And there weren't any secondary characters I liked as much as I liked Jack and Toombs.
The animated Riddick is sweet; it's only like 22 minutes long but it's pretty cool. Has one of the stranger alien designs I've seen.
The big problem with Chronicles Of Riddick is that it's not one movie, it's two movies - a badass stripped-down space-mercenaries-and-prison-planet movie, and a wanky (though crazily, inspiredly designed) space-opera "mythology" movie where there's a Prophecy Of The Chosen One and the badguy tries to steal Riddick's…