He meant nearly half a kilometer.
He meant nearly half a kilometer.
It's been a long time since I originally read it back in high school, but I think Andy's stay in the book covered a few more years than the movie did; and I distinctly remember a passage in the book where the narrator (Red) stated that he knew Andy stopped digging for a long while - either out of fear, or because he…
Four Weddings And A Funeral is a typical British-flavored rom-com, with a mix of genuinely funny and truly heartbreaking moments. But Andie McDowell's line at the end "Is it raining? I hadn't noticed." is so clunky and eye-rollingly cheesy that it totally throws me out of the moment every time.
I see they are continuing their trend of hiring dark haired, semi-handsome leads who manage to look really intense without actually "acting".
Moe slaps Larry for the first time in Math class; he is immediately expelled from school and force-fed Ritalin
20,000 Leagues Of Their Own
I'm not sure about Darby O'Gill getting 100% Fresh on RT, but it's farily harmless, is a groundbreaking film technically (Peter Jackson referenced it as a major influence on the early practical LOTR effects - at least before he got CGI-happy), boasts a young handsome Sean Connery, and a ridiculously cute Janet Munro.
…by Willie.
He's the Wong man for the job.
"Can anything be really said to be 'starring' Joe Estevez?"
Heavy, black, and pendulous.
Man, "Best Sound Mixing" is gonna be a bloodbath this year.
Scott Bakula already tried it, but all he saved was Jackie (which I thought was a great episode of Quantum Leap, btw)
Dave Franco? Insert video clip of Michael Scott screaming "No!" over and over at Toby here.
Hasbro was trying to decide which "action pose" from the movie to cast the piece in - holding pots and pans from the exciting "making dinner" scene, or the part where she cries and hugs Leia at the end.
Is that half of someone/thing's face reflected in Kate McKinnon's glasses? Spooky.
I sort of get the complaints about this song, but the "what's in this drink?" line never bothered me. In the pre-Roofie days I think it was a fairly common and (semi) innocent phrase that just meant the drink was strong, or that it contained alcohol when it wasn't supposed to.
I liked the first one. I liked the second one, even with the Khan crap. But this one concerns me.
"Jam Handy reminds you to keep your preserves in a convenient place."
It may even edge out "Do they know it's Christmas" as the most depressing Christmas song.