avclub-3f70477706cf04c5a5cf5800484e55c5--disqus
Tadzio
avclub-3f70477706cf04c5a5cf5800484e55c5--disqus

hey, a crappy movie that will hardly ennoble the medium, but get lots of undeserved, lurid attention.

hey, a crappy movie that will hardly ennoble the medium, but get lots of undeserved, lurid attention.

Tom Arnold's appearance was the highlight. Too bad they did/could not have enlisted the participation of John Goodman and Sara Gilbert, because I agree someone with some history and context would have enriched the thing. I found Gottfried funny, and I think he got off maybe the best line about his voice being

Tom Arnold's appearance was the highlight. Too bad they did/could not have enlisted the participation of John Goodman and Sara Gilbert, because I agree someone with some history and context would have enriched the thing. I found Gottfried funny, and I think he got off maybe the best line about his voice being

Absolutely right about the theme, misanthrope; it is louder, noisier, more cluttered, and certainly more pompous, but devoid of atmosphere and continues the trend of being worse rather than better than previous versions.

Absolutely right about the theme, misanthrope; it is louder, noisier, more cluttered, and certainly more pompous, but devoid of atmosphere and continues the trend of being worse rather than better than previous versions.

Great episode—I have more vivid memories of the "Brothers in Arms" sequence than probably any other montage I saw on original broadcast during the 80s (except maybe the Billy Vera & the Beaters' "At This Moment" on Family Ties.)

Great episode—I have more vivid memories of the "Brothers in Arms" sequence than probably any other montage I saw on original broadcast during the 80s (except maybe the Billy Vera & the Beaters' "At This Moment" on Family Ties.)

TDKR alluded strongly to the reign of terror, then flat-out quotes "A Tale of Two Cities" in the eulogy at the end. The entire movie is about how to draw the line: Batman draws the line at killing, which is what separates him from the criminals; they have to negotiate the expediency of trampling civil rights (the Dent

TDKR alluded strongly to the reign of terror, then flat-out quotes "A Tale of Two Cities" in the eulogy at the end. The entire movie is about how to draw the line: Batman draws the line at killing, which is what separates him from the criminals; they have to negotiate the expediency of trampling civil rights (the Dent

I disagree completely. I found TDKR thrilling, and noticed the plot holes thinking about it afterward, but they never spoiled my enjoyment of the film. Prometheus was so stupid and its plot holes so distracting that I was annoyed and waiting for it to be over. Prometheus was ambitious, and tried to raise big

I don't know about you guys, but when Seinfeld featured Mel Torme I knew who he was because I had been a regular viewer of Night Court, and if I recall correctly, Judge Harry was a big fan of the Velvet Fog.

I don't know about you guys, but when Seinfeld featured Mel Torme I knew who he was because I had been a regular viewer of Night Court, and if I recall correctly, Judge Harry was a big fan of the Velvet Fog.

"The Jeffersons was right!" lol

"The Jeffersons was right!" lol

that movie is more overrated than sliced bread. sheesh.

that movie is more overrated than sliced bread. sheesh.

for a second I thought you were going all Faulkner on me. Should have said "My Marlin is a fish!"

for a second I thought you were going all Faulkner on me. Should have said "My Marlin is a fish!"

The Tenth Planet
Inferno (or Invasion of the Dinosaurs)
Robots of Death and Warrior's Gate
Androzani (or Frontios)
Terror of the Vervoids
Greatest Show in the Galaxy (Paradise Towers and/or Happiness Patrol)