avclub-a00a91831315d66f08e1b91d10fe503d--disqus
Benjamin Jacob Grimm
avclub-a00a91831315d66f08e1b91d10fe503d--disqus

I'm with you, except I've stopped trying to like it. It's just not for me, and I accept that. It's just too… screechy.

John Goodman tried out, I think for the 1980 disaster season.
I think he's actually been on the show more than most of the people they actually hired.

Kirby was probably more because Jack Kirby had a run on Green Arrow in the 50s. And Etrigan's host is Jason Blood, not Sebastian. Brother Blood in the comics was a cult leader who mainly fought the Teen Titans.

I'm sure the Asylum is working on it.

If you ask nice, though, the servers will give you head.

We're this close to seeing Rap: The Musical…

The weirdest thing about that movie is that is starred someone from Arrested Development and still ripped off a massive plot point from Arrested Development.

Have you seen the third season of Star Trek? He's played along with some pretty bad stuff.

I'm still trying to figure out how it's possible that Ryan Murphy hasn't cast Shatner in anything yet. Shatner in full ham mode seems like a perfect fit for his stuff.

Nematodes.

Xenu is the one who offers him the deal. The movie ends after he agrees to a billion-year contract to be L. Ron Hubbard's bosun.

Sort of a celestial Voltron?

I was trying to think of a violent sociopath he could pick a fight with, but the most violent sociopath I could think of was Chris Brown.

I grew up there, and was also in high school during that election, and it was essentially the formative event on my political views. And, much to my surprise, I've managed to only get more cynical since then,

One of my big takeaways after these originally came out on DVD was how incredibly good Larraine Newman was - she might have been the most versatile of the female cast, and was neck-in-neck with Aykroyd for overall.

We're still allowed to hate The Long and Winding Road, right?

Maybe a hip, with-it, scat-singing jazz cat. Isn't that what the youngsters like nowadays?

I'd go further and say it's Burton's best film, and probably Depp's greatest performance, period. I've always wondered if its financial (relative) failure led to the beginning of Burton's "phoning it in" period.

Si.

I talked to him at Megacon this past year and he was very friendly and easygoing. Admittedly, he had Jeffrey Katzenberg's head on a stake on his table.