My kid loves that song, so that might work.
My kid loves that song, so that might work.
I'd say "Johnny Appleseed" by Joe Strummer, but I'm not sure how the memory of me would measure up to it.
I'm familiar with a bunch of these bands, but I've never heard the term "post-rock" before. I don't know that one genre is big enough to include Slint and Sigur Ros.
Shh!
Honestly, with all of her crimes against cooking and good taste, I'd have been disappointed if she weren't batshit and racist.
Pretty much every picture I've ever seen of her looks like there must be a gun pointing at her head just outside of the picture, and she's saying, "I'm smiling as big as I can, please don't kill me." You'd think after years of this she'd say, "fuck it, just kill me already."
It'll cost you just a nickel…
Shouldn't this be called Epimethius?
Yes and a biologist that freaks when they find a dead organism, then just has to go and touch the live one.
Not smart enough to run to the side though.
Yeah, it's especially striking because in previous roles she's often given very little to do. I just saw her as Augusta in The Robber Bride and the part was so forgettable, it hardly seems like this could be the same actress.
That's a good quote. It also perfectly describes the phenomenon of poor people voting as if they were just about to become rich.
Thanks to a couple dozen screenings of Rocky Horror Picture Show, Peter Suschitzky is not a name I'll ever forget.
Yeah I have a hard time understanding why her book was so controversial. There's nothing new in the idea that ordinary folks will cheerfully participate in evil deeds as long as they think it's all part of something good. Arendt's three books on the origins of totalitarianism are just about the best thing I've ever…
Well they can always call it a sequel to Runaway Train. Plus bonus female cast member.
For a second I got mixed up and thought they were remaking Delta House.
When I was 17 or so I somehow managed to walk into this movie without realizing it was a vampire flick, which made it even more fun.
"Perpetual thrash zone" needs to be a real thing.
You make it sound almost utopian.
Any time a movie doubles as allegory, the sequels are probably going to rob it of several layers of meaning. At least the matrix sequels had the decency to introduce some new themes.