It looks like it's supposed to be either a C or a D, but definitely not a DC.
It looks like it's supposed to be either a C or a D, but definitely not a DC.
Raven.
Well, yeah: Ghostbusters is about the proliferation of slavery in the 1700's. When they bring the Statue of Liberty to life using ectoplasm at the end of the second movie, what the filmmakers are saying is, slavery BUILT America, people. Deal with it.
That song doesn't usually last three hours, but we got into a serious thing… and then I forgot how it ended.
Take this, it's an 8-track tape. It's one of the last in
existence. I want you to steal a car…
Scrappy means:
Erased 2: Rewritten
"Each of you will be beheaded!"
"What?"
"Oh for crying out loud… EACH OF YOU WILL BE BEHEADED!!"
Haven't read the book, but from the looks of it I'd think it couldn't take more than two and a half hours to read anyway.
Robert Shaw wrote a few good novels, as well as plays and the like. I assume that 99% of people just know him as Quint from Jaws, so that's something.
Well, Rockmond Dunbar's name on Terriers was "Gustafson," so I don't think it's that big a deal.
You know, this film has certain flaws…
Are there some talented people involved with the film that I don't know about? Because all I'm seeing is Baz Luhrman and Leonardo DiCaprio.
Narrator: There is one terrifying word in the world of nuclear physics…
Tom Servo: "Oops."
Unless you mean Jackson Pollacks.
I AAAAAAMMMMMMM, I AM SUUUUPERMAN
AND I CAN DO ANYTHING
Which Weezer song?
Hey, me too. Can't remember when exactly, but "Change (In the House of Flies)" was new on the radio, and Incubus were the openers. The Deftones were explosive, but then Chino cut up his arm somehow and they had to end the show early. Still pretty cool.
He's just this oversexed, brilliant kind of animal.
He did a commentary for Casablanca, one for Crumb, and the aforementioned Dark City. Haven't heard Dark City, but the other two are good. Oh, and he did the Criterion version of Ozu's Floating Weeds, and apparently one for the movie he wrote, Russ Meyer's Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, which I didn't know even…