avclub-6f6b3ef67eea6ebbd94b9e9193490cd7--disqus
TheLordFlasheart
avclub-6f6b3ef67eea6ebbd94b9e9193490cd7--disqus

I have to admit, I just don''t understand why Neve Campbell was considered hot all those years ago. There are stars that I don't find physically attractive yet I can understand why other people do, but I just never got the Neve Campbell thing. What am I not seeing?

Have to disagree about something…
The line in the review where Steve states "Chuck spends so much time making Chuck (and I suppose Morgan) look suave…" Huh?

As someone who has never watched this show before…
…I thought that it was meh with a few bright moments. I have to say that George Takei showing up in the one guy's fantasy was pretty damn funny - "He said he was confused…"

Anyone see Val Kilmer in the TG sequel on SNL?
Spectacularly unfunny, although I would blame the writers as Kilmer has great comic chops. I liked the idea though that Iceman was now flying for a regional airline trying to impress his co-workers with stories of his glory days.

Having been in high school when this came out I remember how insanely popular it was. I remember thinking at the time that the flying sequences were thrilling and that I'd never seen anything like them before. That alone can make a film really popular and memorable (Twister, anyone?) despite the overall quality. I had

Favourite line from Will and Grace, when Jack marries the housekeeper so she can stay in the country:

I found Wells to be unbelievably gorgeous when I saw the first film, and was really disappointed that she wasn't available for the sequel. I do find Shue very attractive, but the wig certainly didn't do her any favours - and she seemed like a "golly-gee" girl-next-door type, whereas Wells was more super-hot dream

IIRC (too lazy to look it up) BTTF was the biggest film of 1985. Plus it had a very popular TV star break out into a very well-received and popular film, so it was a pretty huge part of pop culture.

I thought that this ep was better than anything else this season but that's faint praise…

I just saw Cinema Paradiso at the TIFF (Toronto International Film Festival) Lightbox theatre this weekend! I can't comment much about the films in this article (having only seen Matinee) but I would say that Cinema Paradiso is easily the best film about watching films that I've ever seen. For that reason I can't

Well, shit. Now all y'all have convinced me to go back and re-read them. I first read them when I was say 13/14, so that's 27 years ago now. I'm not so worried about remembering or forgetting plot points, it's just the "expecting the unexpected" thing I'm worried about.

I'm hesitant to re-read the books…
Interesting timing for this article to appear as I just noticed these books on someone's shelf a couple of days ago and thought it might be best to not re-read them.

That's Turd Blossom, you uneducated Godless commie homosexual. How dare you not have rememberized all of Our Greatest President's nicknames for his staffers?

Well said, Flaubert.

They really did do this for Shatner many years back…
Someone made a joke about Shatner being digitally slimmed but it's no joke. I remember a report on an entertainment show (Entertainment Tonight?) several years ago showcasing what computers were able to do in terms of saving money for re-shoots. The two clips they

When I was a kid, I had seen every episode of Star Trek 3 or 4 times. Then, several years later when I was in high school, I saw an episode that I had never seen before - Requiem For Methuselah. Why I had never seen this episode before is a mystery to this day (I can't think of any reason why it would be left out of

I thought that Doctor Who's explanation of fixed points/fluid points was a pretty great compromise. I think of the fixed points being the framework that holds up history, but what happens in between can change (unless it were to change so much as to necessitate a change in a fixed point). Like how you can renovate a

I also had no problem with the way Kurt acted. Was it a bit insensitive? Yes. Was it understandable? Double yes.

So, is religion such a sensitive topic in the US that using Dear God would have created a bit of a backlash/firestorm? Not that I think that fundamentalists are the type to watch Glee but that was my first thought…

I would now put him on the Unhateable List, which surprises me. The first time that I remember seeing him was a walking interview that he did for a Canadian entertainment TV show (I'm guessing that it was around the time of the PizzaPlace sitcom). It was one of the most embarrassing performances I had ever seen. He