The Osmonds' "Crazy Horses" invented heavy metal.
The Osmonds' "Crazy Horses" invented heavy metal.
He'd be like, "Fuck sending ravens, we have parrots down here."
"Oh, it's just some idiot with balloons"
The real problem with this season was that with Tywin and Joffrey gone, the villains and protagonists were either too cartoonish(Ramsey and Ellaria) or just too vague to really be around much—and the sympathetic characters that we might identify with have become sort of boring and/or unsympathetic.
Though the plot in the books where Doran could send the Sand Snakes to Kings Landing is probably off now that Marcella was poisoned.
No, there's is another hope for Westeros that everyone has forgotten about….and his name is Hot Pie.
"Is that Zombie Rock? Well, turn it up, man!"
It doesn't have to make sense but at least give us some protagonists in Dorne worthy of attention. The acting, characters, and plotting in Dorne this season was pretty weak.
As well It seems like when Melisandre or Varys want to get somewhere it seems like they can arrive the next day, yet other characters seem to take all season to go the same distance..
Good Will Hunting 2: They Fahkin' Left Me on Mahs
The old Hollywood Theatre in Portland, Oregon down the street from me just started showing old movies in 70 mm this year, so that's a plus, maybe I'll get to see this one.
I remember hearing All Eyez on Me nonstop for months but I think it was out in '96 not '95.
Bad Boys was innovative for it's time because before that action films would have a black cop paired with a white cop—Bad Boys said wait a second, why not have two black cops working together. Groundbreaking.
"There will be a substantial reward for the one who finds Randy Howard. You are free to use any methods necessary but I want him alive - no disintegrations!"
Maybe 1990 wasn't Tom Hanks' favorite year after Joe Vs. The Volcano(which I liked, but flopped) and the Bonfire of the Vanities(which really flopped). But from 1992 on, Tom Hanks was in hit after hit about every year.
Skee Lo's "I Wish" and The Pharcyde's "Passin' Me By" are the kings of self-deprecating, sad-sack hip-hop.
I remember seeing Limp Bizkit in 1997 at the Warped Tour and remembering everyone was like "What is this shit?" That was a surprise when two years later they were huge.
Bah, and you damn kids get off my halfpipe!
I remember really loving Braveheart after seeing it in the theater as a 15-year-old for the battle scenes, but by the next year seeing it again on TV, it lost some of it's luster.
I would like to have seen Heat in the theaters—I saw it on VHS and cable the next year but never on the big screen. Just an amazing crime film, and maybe the last great work DeNiro did before falling into mediocrity and the occasional good bit part.