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The Ferret Who Fixes Airplanes
avclub-38dbcc9d16431f8ec7bf1d0a455aa71a--disqus

I'm with you - always liked that poor little redheaded stepchild. One of the few sci-fi movies I've seen that made me feel literally dirty - those trademark Fincher visual elements that everyone loved in movies like Se7en are there, and though the premise is pretty flawed, it has a fantastic supporting cast (Charles

They sure do. However, I always liked this scene, as it made me more genuinely uncomfortable than any other in the movie - being two of the more "likeable" characters, it struck me as pretty interesting that Coppola would basically have Lance and Chef turn into sexual sadists around the Bunnies, who are entirely

They sure do. However, I always liked this scene, as it made me more genuinely uncomfortable than any other in the movie - being two of the more "likeable" characters, it struck me as pretty interesting that Coppola would basically have Lance and Chef turn into sexual sadists around the Bunnies, who are entirely

I think he's saying "this puppy" in reference to the weapon.

I think he's saying "this puppy" in reference to the weapon.

Fair enough, but look what happened to the 30 Rock reviews when there was nothing new to talk about on that show. I'm all about the discussion aspect, not to mention the bringing-in of newbies, but there's a fine line between celebrating a show's continual strengths and beating the proverbial dead horse.

Fair enough, but look what happened to the 30 Rock reviews when there was nothing new to talk about on that show. I'm all about the discussion aspect, not to mention the bringing-in of newbies, but there's a fine line between celebrating a show's continual strengths and beating the proverbial dead horse.

If you read his books, you may find yourself retracting that statement. Not that I don't enjoy them.

If you read his books, you may find yourself retracting that statement. Not that I don't enjoy them.

I remember noticing this and finding it to be really dramatic, not to mention extremely sad. Morgan Spurlock, eat your heart out.

I remember noticing this and finding it to be really dramatic, not to mention extremely sad. Morgan Spurlock, eat your heart out.

Not sure a weekly review is really essential - what can you say about this show week after week? I mean, I'm a fan, and even I can admit that a big part of the whole delightful aspect of Workaholics is that there is really no meaningful development episode-to-episode to speak of. What could be said? "Ders was less

Not sure a weekly review is really essential - what can you say about this show week after week? I mean, I'm a fan, and even I can admit that a big part of the whole delightful aspect of Workaholics is that there is really no meaningful development episode-to-episode to speak of. What could be said? "Ders was less

But their name remains shyte.

But their name remains shyte.

I'll be the guy to say this - Rocket Juice and the Moon is probably more interesting than anything new Blur could come up with, solely because of the presence of Tony Allen. Their old albums are great, but this is just a nostalgia trip everyone is on.

I'll be the guy to say this - Rocket Juice and the Moon is probably more interesting than anything new Blur could come up with, solely because of the presence of Tony Allen. Their old albums are great, but this is just a nostalgia trip everyone is on.

That's "To the wundah!"

Agreed, to both of ya's. Once you start getting into electro sub-genres, it starts to feel like squid fucking - a giant, violent orgy of unnecessary distinction and indistinction.

DJ Spooky and Songs for a Dead Dreamer, if you're gonna go there. Still, Spooky and Shadow are both drawing more from an R&B/jazz outlook than the Brits, who, musically, are descended pretty directly from all the Madchester stuff.