avclub-7d3801b6f067e0249124cd3fd66640b8--disqus
Stumpy
avclub-7d3801b6f067e0249124cd3fd66640b8--disqus

I like Jim James and My Morning Jacket, so that scene embedded above was a nice little surprise in the latter half of the movie. Cate Blanchett was great, but she should have played Dylan for the whole thing. While some parts stand out, its not enough for to *want* to see the movie again.

"This video is no longer available due to copyright claim by Sony Pictures Entertainment"
I love the old world stupidity of that. "We didn't say you could watch this video from here! Who do you think you are!" It's a fucking commercial. If this was the whole movie, I could maybe understand it. In ten or twenty

This thread is amazing. Someone compared the song in the article to an musician they don't like. Then a meth-mouthed trailer park dweller, who searches the internet while dryly tugging on him rancid cock (out of habit) and drinking warm, flat Mountain Dew in a two liter bottle, reads the comment but doesn't

Cornell wrote Father's Day, Family of Blood and Human Nature, touche.

Christopher Eccleston seemed really out of place surrounded by all the camp. David Tennant, while as hammy as they come, could not save a bad episode, and would just resort to his usual shtick: chin up, bulging eyes, grit teeth, and lots of shouting. Also the writing was terrible. Stephen Moffat wrote the only

Its unusual to see a "failed firsties" with a registered account name. All that CancerAids must be slowing your reaction time.

I caught a 'Where Are They Now' about that child actor a few years ago. He seemed like a fairly normal teenager, at the time. One memoral moment though was when he showed them his parent's back yard, which had a playground's assortment of giant metal jungle gyms, slides. swingsets, and merry-go-rounds (obviously

He sounds embarassed by how smart he is, surely a trait that's been beaten into him since he was a kid. Hell, the 12 year-old playground bully in me kinda wants to beat him up and pour dirt down his underpants.

So that's where Phoebe Cates went!

@Frankenstein's Monster, same here. Sidenote: the last two times that I've been "call in to work"-sick, coincidentally I wound up watching Hard Candy on TV. And both times, by the point of the castration scene my nausea dissipated, my fever broke, and on the whole started feeling better. Worryingly, off camera

Well that makes two of us.

Bullock was a bully whose chosen victims were powerful, self-righteous male authority figures. When he got into it there was an undercurrent of sadism and enjoyment the hero of a story is rarely allowed to show (and still be a good guy). His lowest point had to have been beating the shit out of E.B. in season

I'm sure they'll *show* the circumstances…

I'm sure they'll the circustances of The Loch Ness Monster, Abominable Snowman, and Bigfoot's banishment. Maybe the badguy can be sexy spanish goat named Chupacabra! Yeah I got nothin. I'm guessing this means that they're introducing new characters/villains in this prequel and them paying them off in a sequel to

The only memorable bit from that movie is immediately undercut by a hilariously stupid cop-out. Near the climax, Sam Elliot, who plays a dead cowboy acting as Ghost Rider's Yoda (or Cogliostro) appears to help him fight the main villain and then rides with Ghost Rider through the desert on a flaming skeleton horse.

Its amazing to me just how much Ken Howard looks like the president of some multi-billion dollar comglomerate. In Michael Clayton, he seemed so perfect as the CEO of U-North, I just figured he was a retired exec they brought in as a consultant and just gave him the role for a cameo.

Yo Mama, "I've been laughing tones this season." There was a moment where I tried to figure out that meant. Like maybe it means when something's so funny you sound like the musical tones in Close Encounters: "hu-He-HAH-ho-huh."

He should play Garret Morris in a biopic about early Saturday Night Live, written by Aaron Sorkin.

While I've heard of it, before today, I couln't tell you who starred in it. Watching a movie about a couple of old bitter drunks arguing until (presumably) one of them dies strangely doesn't appeal to me. I'll probably see it before I die. But I don't know, it's not very high on my to do list.

How is Dexter still on the air? That show is so one-note I can't see how its lasted more than a season. Its like House. They lucked out in casting a genuinely good character actor and now they're feeding off 'em like a parasite. Every Hugh Laurie interview has been a cry for help.