Happy Thought was really funny, and the first few seasons of his show were good. When he made the transition to full douche-mode, though, he lost a lot of what made him funny.
Happy Thought was really funny, and the first few seasons of his show were good. When he made the transition to full douche-mode, though, he lost a lot of what made him funny.
That's not Horsey sauce! That's not Horsey sauce at all!
Takes permits many, money more!
I think we need a special shout out to Bill Irwin, actor and mime, for an amazing performance as Ham Gravy. Really great work.
Yeah, I literally just finished watching this on Netflix and it's…not good. It isn't awful, but it is overly long, the songs are incredibly repetitive, and the story (such as it is) is stretched far too thin over two hours.
According to Wikipedia, it wasn't really a flop, as it made back its
budget plus some profit, but it did not perform nearly as well as Disney
was hoping. They made it after losing the rights to Annie, which didn't
really perform that well either.
Largely agree, but I like the Bart in France episode. And Albert Brooks as the RV salesman is great.
>Looks down at genitals<
And win, dammit!
She could at least have added a beret.
The racism of the black maid, Mammy Two Shoes, is rather off putting as well.
I find most things should have Joan Cusack in them. She's a delight.
A running joke through many 30s/40s cartoons was a side character noticing something odd, turning to the audience and saying "Well, now I've seen everything." He would then produce a revolver and blow his brains out. It was a different time.
Bill tried his best, but he's only one man.
It's the Star Wars Ewoks dilemma. If your over a certain age, the Ewoks are like nails on a chalk board. Having seen Jedi when I was 4/5, they are annoying but generally inoffensive to me.
Ladyhawke is an interesting idea that does not fill a full 90 minute movie. And it has too god damn much Mathew Broderick.
Someone pointed out that you can tell the moon landing was real because the Soviets, always a fan of a conspiracy, never claimed it was a hoax.
William Tecumseh Sherman never said "War is hell", but he might have said something even more bad-ass. When the mayor objected to Sherman's forced evacuation of all the women and children of Atlanta, he wrote (paraphrasing here) "This will go down as one of the most cruel and barbaric acts in the history of warfare."…
Please forgive Lemur, he knows not what he does.
21, 22, 23-skidoo!