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onthewall2983
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It kind of shows some promise for the genre. That and films like Gravity and Interstellar aiming for greater glory than just huge box office.

For me it was just how the child was left behind. It showed how truly alien the two characters were by not paying attention at all. It also shows that it is truly told from their point of view, not showing a whole lot of the human drama unfolding that resulted in that child being left there as well.

It is gorgeously terrifying as someone above said, but part of that was in the trailer where nothing from the beach was I believe.

FWIW, it is the scene on the beach. It's implications actually kept me up at night. Also didn't help that I nearly drowned myself when I was a very young child, to the point that I never bothered how to learn to swim.

At least you didn't mention this season of Justified like you did mentioning that this season had one of the worst episodes of the 2013-2014 season. I had problems with the show's last season, but that went a bit too far for me.

Under The Skin is one of those rare films that are great, but I'll probably have no problem ever seeing it again. One scene in particularly disturbs me just even thinking about it. There's something oddly satisfying about that, as someone who doesn't really even like much horror. And it definitely works as a horror

The first thing that popped into my head when I read this is that he just became the posterboy for Atheism.

Reading about this on Wikipedia was an ordeal in and of itself, not sure I'd want to sit through a slowed-down version of that. What I remember clearly was that it took place in Indianapolis.

I think we have Edward Norton to thank in part for that.

This reminds me of a book that came out not long ago written by Duane Allman's daughter, chronicling her journey to find out who he was more than just as a musician since he passed when she was just a baby as well.

He is. Judging his IMDB, his filmography is incredibly thin for having done some pretty iconic work.

Their sausage biscuits are practically a life hack made food.

Without having heard it since it was popular on radio and VH1, this song's major crime is adding the word "Really" to the great Jimmy Cox song, popularized by Eric Clapton,

You just won't do it any better than Bill Bailey.

The song he did with Tina Turner was kind of awesome, too. The one I really like is "When The Night Comes", as sung by Joe Cocker.

I saw the documentary on him joining Journey. There could be a genuinely good movie made about an aging white American rock band taking a lead singer from a 3rd-world country.

More successful in Europe. "I Know What I Like" was a bigger but modest hit there.

I love the story about how he printed up anti-Boz shirts for Denver and the Broncos faithful ate it up with him making out like a bandit.

I thought she was pretty good in the otherwise reviled The Counselor.

Frank Zappa. Seems to me he poured any negative from his life into his song-writing.