avclub-93db85ed909c13838ff95ccfa94cebd9--disqus
dAeryx Aqueryx
avclub-93db85ed909c13838ff95ccfa94cebd9--disqus

You learn to live with yourself, enjoy the pleasures in life, like Friday supper reservations at Dorsia, and get yourself a nice set of business cards, tastefully typeset in Silian Rail on a thick cardstock of Bone.

Turn The Terrible Tank

@ littlealex: True, the scanner janitor could do that. But realistically, at the end of the day, who do you think will be the one to clean all that shit up?

How about Rocknrolla? Weren't we promised some sort of next chapter at the movie's end?

Maybe the next sequel could be in Feel-Around?

I just finished watching the whole movie on YouTube. Kudos, AV Club and commentors, for clueing me in on a wonderful overlooked gem of a comedy.

No, but they really loved cute females who could blow the trombone well.

Die Hard: Unbreakable

Indeed, proximity grenades were a boon (especially in stairwells!), but they could notoriously take your shit out as well.
For me, the favorites were the laptop gun (mount one on a wall opposite you in auto-fire mode, and use the other one=excellent cross-fire traps on your enemy). And, although tactically weak, the

Don't forget Jekyll & Hyde…Together Again. The WTH comedy of the '80s!

Having watched next week's show preview after tonight's episode, yes, it appears Gretchen is his mother. My gut feeling is that he may also be Nucky's illegitimate son.

It's "Blind Fury" for the NRA set.

The father returns to earth in the form of a magical Negro with the power to convert Islamic jihadists into emotionally available "The Secret" believers.

….and when CLU finally meets his sticky end, the movie will be CLU-less! HA!

I suppose from a photorealistic sense that the young Bridges looks fakey as hell. But when you think about it a sec, the fakey Bridges is a computer construct in a virtual computer world. Maybe it's purposeful and beneficial for that character to appear so?

Well, now that we're on a Hugh Grant theme, how about Notting Hill? Ostensibly, the movie's makers want you to believe that they got married, had a child, and lived reasonably happy in the end, but, given all the situations subsequent to it, I don't believe it would have lasted more than a few years after.

What a collection of assholes.

Pencil me in the "Liking It, Though Flawed" column. I started watching on HBO this month and was surprised by its hilarious surreal weirdness. Step Brothers, too.

I'd say knowing more about a Christopher Nolan flick would deflate its value. His movies are better seen with a minimum of plot knowledge going in.

@ Hobochangba: It made me read Redgauntlet by Sir Walter Scott.