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Zieg
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Further than that. To the Vanishing Point!

I sometimes forget why I was so disappointed in the first one. My memories of it are generally passable. And then I remember "The Zing". And the fact that this made money hand over fist the same year Paranorman and Frankenweenie, two far superior films, struggled.

"Ha ha! They didn't even clean the shit out of the man's intestines before eating them! And those are CLEARLY pig intestines! So unrealistic!"

Somebody's got to be rich. Might as well be Christian Bale.

I was in college when those books came out and I still bought a copy based on the illustrations. I made a copy of the illustration of the girl and blew it up and put it on the door in the common room. When my roommate was terrified of it I got to respond with: "Come on! Its from a kids book!"

As has become tradition, I have to respond to this post saying I felt the exact opposite way. I loved The Innkeepers but left House of the Devil wonder what the fuss was about.

I thought its unreadability was kind of the point. A peek inside the mind of someone so obsessed with things where he constantly spewed near stream of consciousness inanity about what he ate and where he ate and who with and which face products he used and what music he listened to that when he switched over to which

I still remember the horror of a scratching bunny's paw. You just didn't find good stuff like that on TV back then.

His artwork in Sandman was incredible. His image of Lucifer actually looking like a fallen angel is still the iconic one for me. I'd like it if he did more collaborations though. I love The Maxx but when looking for his stuff later on I picked up one called Four Women I think and it just seemed more of the same. I'd

Exactly. There is one Krampus movie coming out which will be worth watching and its the one by the guy who did Trick R Treat. And there is one Krampus movie you should have already watched, and its called Rare Exports.

He did a pretty decent song on the Wreck It Ralph sound track.

All I can see when I look at that Last Guardian trailer is how many times I would have fallen to my death in that sequence. At least its a safe bet that the sound of the child dying would have been well animated and charmingly voiced.

I was like "Aw Yeah" when I saw Barrett's arm. Then Cloud's sword. Then I saw Cloud's head and thought: "Needs more gel"

I don't know anyone who hasn't seen Uncle Buck at least ten times. Or at least that's what I assume. Maybe its less popular than I'd thought. Someone should do a feature on that.

I thought this was an incredible pun and most people just weren't old enough to get it. But then I realized I was thinking of Crystal Castles and that those weren't fruit but, you know, crystals. Now I just feel old.

The trade off here is that while we now have a far wider variety of media to consume, we also have a far wider social network. Everyone in that town listened to Amos and Andy, but the their social circle also likely stopped at the city limits. So to any individual in that small town, "everyone" amounted to maybe a

Azzarello did different things with Constantine. His Freezes Over arc where its never clear how much of what's going on is magic and how much is superstition is a perfect foreshadowing of Warren Ellis' The Crib, which is perhaps my favorite Hellblazer comic of all time. Is it magic? It is if they believe it is.

That picture is awesome.

I like Tears. But I can't really listen to it now that I've realized the familiar sounding riff that transitions to the end of the song is essentially from Michael Jackson. "Why? Why? Tell them that its human nature."

exactly. combine that with the fact that legal battles had left many thinking the band was dead and it makes perfect sense. but the title smacks of a kind of bigger than jesus pomposity which I think probably put a lot of people off, at least stateside where that kind of claim really felt misplaced.