We saw that in the theater when I was little — in *summer*. Figure that one out.
We saw that in the theater when I was little — in *summer*. Figure that one out.
Heh, my family drove all the way to the weird little New Hampshire mall-theater when I was little hoping to catch "Follow That Bird". We missed it and wound up seeing "Black Cauldron" instead. Have had an inordinate fondness for "Cauldron" ever since.
For me, it wasn't "The Little Mermaid" that made me fall in love with Disney animation again as a preteen, it was "Rescuers Down Under". The Marahute scenes melted my face off, and no film has ever given me a more vivid sensation of flying. I'd be down for a 3D rerelease, even though it'll never happen.
For me, it wasn't "The Little Mermaid" that made me fall in love with Disney animation again as a preteen, it was "Rescuers Down Under". The Marahute scenes melted my face off, and no film has ever given me a more vivid sensation of flying. I'd be down for a 3D rerelease, even though it'll never happen.
Honestly, "Meatballs or Consequences" is a dear favorite of mine, and stands with the finale of "Hooked on a Ceiling" as one of the top three moments where I knew this show was a winner (the aforementioned "Hearts of Darkness"/"Day the Clown Cried" episode being the third).
Honestly, "Meatballs or Consequences" is a dear favorite of mine, and stands with the finale of "Hooked on a Ceiling" as one of the top three moments where I knew this show was a winner (the aforementioned "Hearts of Darkness"/"Day the Clown Cried" episode being the third).
I'd watch that episode.
I'd watch that episode.
You strike me as the kind of person who whines that tyrannosaurs suddenly are no longer scary, now that we know they were feathered…
You strike me as the kind of person who whines that tyrannosaurs suddenly are no longer scary, now that we know they were feathered…
Kind of like how "Cars" would have been better if Mater had said, offhand, "Aw, shoot, I wish all the humans were still alive to see that!"
Kind of like how "Cars" would have been better if Mater had said, offhand, "Aw, shoot, I wish all the humans were still alive to see that!"
I would really love a book/documentary that chronicles in detail the making of a terrible, ill-conceived children's film. Yeah, "Hearts of Darkness" is pretty good, but I want to see how "Theodore Rex" happened.
I would really love a book/documentary that chronicles in detail the making of a terrible, ill-conceived children's film. Yeah, "Hearts of Darkness" is pretty good, but I want to see how "Theodore Rex" happened.
Methinks, given the rumors of a remake from a while back, that perhaps "Drop-Dead-Fred" deserves to be covered in this feature. Should be covered anyway as it is indeed a bizarre fucking film.
Methinks, given the rumors of a remake from a while back, that perhaps "Drop-Dead-Fred" deserves to be covered in this feature. Should be covered anyway as it is indeed a bizarre fucking film.
Holy sh*t, "Mr. Bill's Real Life Adventures"! My dad brought that home from the local video store way, way back in the day all excited because Mr. Bill was his favorite SNL character. It's all live-action for reasons that are unclear, given the very premise of Mr. Bill. And There's an intro and outro where the…
Holy sh*t, "Mr. Bill's Real Life Adventures"! My dad brought that home from the local video store way, way back in the day all excited because Mr. Bill was his favorite SNL character. It's all live-action for reasons that are unclear, given the very premise of Mr. Bill. And There's an intro and outro where the…
I must have seen "Peanut Butter Solution" when I was *very* young (or naive) because I completely missed that the movie went there.
I must have seen "Peanut Butter Solution" when I was *very* young (or naive) because I completely missed that the movie went there.