avclub-664a26f366b9ef4988631e95af9b366d--disqus
sevenzarkseven
avclub-664a26f366b9ef4988631e95af9b366d--disqus

Dunno if it's the same one you are referencing, but the Ghostbusters game I had for my Commodore 64 was pretty so-so, even by C64 game standards. I also remember the G.I. Joe game that never ended, just when you had almost every Cobra villain captured, a few would escape and it started all over again.

I know this is just a tv show, and we're supposed to overlook these things, but I don't know which is more unbelievable: Chevy coming to a decision that quickly, or the fact that two rival agencies can agree to a merger based on a half-baked scheme concocted by just a couple of partners. Speaking of which, I also find

It was fun, but not nearly as enjoyable as Galaxy Quest

I'm so hungry I could eat Arby's

I liked Unbreakable a lot, but I know I was in the minority in the theater when I first saw it. When the end credits started rolling, all I could hear were people booing and groaning. Behind me were two sorority chicks, one of whom said "I kind of liked it" and the other angrily snapped back "No you didn't!".

Agreed. I thought the movie was pretty good, but it started to drag on way too long. Then out of the blue it finished with one of the best movie endings I've seen.

Electric Dragon 80,000V is one of my all-time favorite movies. Every second of it's short running time is awesome.

The death of Scotty's nephew in Wrath of Khan is pretty harsh too, especially the way Doohan's voice chokes up when he says "He stayed at his post, when the other trainees ran"

My favorite was the "Bucket 'o Robins" fast food franchise from the episode with Mr T.

One thing about the dad bugged me: in an early episode, he completes a Rubik's Cube with ease, but in a later episode, he can't solve the identical Russian version of the same toy (The Soviet Block). I demand continuity in my crappy 80's sitcoms!

I loved the book, strange that I've never gotten around to watching the miniseries. One of these days, I suppose.

I think this has the most potential of all the upcoming Marvel movies. Relatively unknown (and silly) source material, plus a cult-film director and a cast without marquee names, means they might just go for broke and make a really fun movie.

Agreed. I liked Affleck in the role, as well as Michael Clark Duncan and Jon Faverau. I also liked how they explained DD's "radar sense". But there was a LOT of dumb crap in that movie too.

JERRY: I think Superman probably has a very good sense of humor.GEORGE: I never heard him say anything really funny.JERRY: But it’s common sense. He’s got super strength, super speed. I’m sure he’s got super humor.GEORGE: You would think that, but either you’re born with a sense of humor, or you’re not. It’s not going

I don't torture chickens! Don't fish eat other fish? The marlin and the trout?

me too

What did Harry say his salary was, something like 23K? That's like $150K a year in today's dollars, which probably slightly below-average for someone that high up the food chain in a NYC ad agency. He was right to bring up his list of grievances, just went the wrong way of doing it.

breathlss79: Pretty much every client I work with acts like they want a non-traditional campaign, but in reality it all comes down to a boring giant logo and/or product shot and easy to read headline. So Peggy's option was just cutting right to the chase.

That was a storyline from last year that seemed odd to me. When Lane first brought the Jag business in, they immediately lost it by taking the client to a brothel, and scoffed at Lane's complaints like it was no big deal to lose that business. Then later, that piece of business was so important, they pimp Joan out to

I AM BAYTOR!