"You Know My Name" is among my Top 5 Bond themes, felt it was a perfect intro for the Daniel Craig era.
"You Know My Name" is among my Top 5 Bond themes, felt it was a perfect intro for the Daniel Craig era.
That made me laugh out loud.
"Sweet Caligula, that's a lot of blood!"
After seeing "Enemy at the Gates" in the theater I referred to it as "Saving Comrade Ivan."
Mimi Rogers as Mrs. Kensington/Peel in that leather catsuit. 'Nuff said.
I think this season is going great but I wish they would just bring the volume down a notch on the sounds of drinking and chewing/swallowing food, especially those hot dogs.
Modine is no Cary Grant, I will give you that. Michelle Pfeiffer as a big-haired brunette though, wow!
"Married to the Mob" is a riot, one of the few movies I have ever laughed out loud at in the theater. And the soundtrack is amazing, one of the best ever put together. I bought it on cassette and later on CD after finding it in a cut-out bin.
Ruby is a gem.
Ruby is a gem.
Actually I was kidding, neither of those headlines were surprising at all.
I don't know what A.V. Club headline surprised me more, this article's or yesterday's "Barry Manilow Comes Out As Gay."
You see this watch? That watch cost more than your car.
The heck with Jimmy Carter, history's greatest monster will be Barack Hussein Obama.
The Mitch and Cam scene was excruciating, couldn't wait for a commercial.
If you thought I was referring to Rockpile as a strange band, what I meant was the headline has the words "Pile" and "Rock" in it so, in a Jeff Goldblum kind of way, Rockpile came to mind.
"Pile is one of the strangest bands in rock music - and one of the best." Reading that headline I immediately thought of the band Rockpile that featured Nick Lowe and Dave Edmunds. Their one and only LP, 1980's "Seconds of Pleasure." is a classic.
Always been a fan of Alec Baldwin's talent, great acting chops and some of his SNL skits are legendary. But I'm guessing he probably is a tremendous jerk in real life.
ABT - Always Be Trumping. ALWAYS Be Trumping!
I actually saw "Grand Canyon" in the theater when it came out and I read
an interview with director Lawrence Kasdan (probably in "Premiere") at
the time of its release and that's what he said. I think the character
was based on Silver more for the violent movies he was producing at the
time.