Has anyone here been to Landmark Sunshine? It's actually a really neat theater. It's always got a great midnight movie lineup (regularly including The Room, often with Wiseau himself there), and a really cool popcorn selection.
Has anyone here been to Landmark Sunshine? It's actually a really neat theater. It's always got a great midnight movie lineup (regularly including The Room, often with Wiseau himself there), and a really cool popcorn selection.
While I do enjoy The Blair Witch Project and his segment from V/H/S/2, Eduardo Sanchez will always be associated with Eastbound and Down to me.
I feel The Sitter gets a bad rap simply because it was DGG and came after Your Highness used up any goodwill he had. It's actually a fairly serviceable, funny comedy. It's pretty standard in terms of plot and stuff, but like with Pineapple Express (and his Eastbound & Down episodes) there's a lot of weird, borderline…
It's gotta be intentional. Cemented when later in the film, he claims one of his special talents to be "the triple jump."
Guest might not be the most accurate comparison, but I definitely got the kind of improvy, faux-documentary vibe from it.
True, but I guess it was just because it was just such a highly concentrated amount of it without much else that it stood out. Plus, stuff like that happened in the context of a half-hour episode, and I always found the portrayal of Hal to be pretty nuanced and layered (as far as sitcom dads go).
Fair enough I suppose, it just struck me as off either way.
Is it just me or did Kaczmarek slip back into the role of Lois much better than Cranston did with Hal? Don't get me wrong, I love both shows, and the video was amusing enough, but I couldn't help like feeling that Cranston wasn't really quite in the swing of things. Hal never seemed quite so whiny or squeaky to me as…
Yes, but again, that was not the showrunners' fault, as they were dealing with untangling another wrongheaded Chang plot Harmon left for them — the third season ended with Chang living in the vents of City College and Spreck going over plots for a takeover. The way I saw the season as playing out was Chang initially…
I mean, I really liked the Chang takeover episodes too. I thought they were hilarious, and appropriately epic. The ploy was good, but the only problem was that they essentially had to sacrifice Chang as a usable character to get to that point — He became a cartoon villain who kidnapped a man for weeks and actually…
Eh, I like this better, because stupid, theatrical, poorly planned schemes are something that have been consistent with Chang's character no matter what incarnation. With it being fake, it gave him the chance of interacting with the group for the whole season, and gradually realizing he likes their acceptance and…
Say what you will about the (admittedly stupid) Changnesia plot, and the way that season four was handled in general, but credit where credit is due: The new showrunners brought Jeong and Chang to a place where he could actually be integrated properly into the show, and engage with the characters in a way that was not…
It's set in the 80s, so it makes sense.
The October family seems to have a lot of potential writing newswires…
Oh, I know about that song, but that was also just one song, and it was made during their cuddly candy-ass Yoshimi phase… It just seems different for a studio to throw money at the band that just came out with "The Terror" to make a full EP of songs for their YA sci-fi adventure (though those songs above aren't very…
yes.
Are these songs like officially linked to the movie/book? I can't really picture a studio commissioning the Flaming Lips to write a half dozen songs for their new potential blockbuster geared towards kids….
The ending to this episode is so good, it's painful. I get misty-eyed every time I think about it, and how perfect this show is. Great reviews Todd. It's been fun.
I thought the exact same thing… Didn't see him either.
Picked up Videodrome, Hausu, and Godzilla all with two minutes to spare!