I dunno, I think the whole freakout sequence still seems a little excessive for a show that's usually so refreshingly low-key about these kinds of things.
I dunno, I think the whole freakout sequence still seems a little excessive for a show that's usually so refreshingly low-key about these kinds of things.
Linda Cardellini is also phenomenal in that scene. She bursts out laughing so hard that you can clearly see the spit flying out of her mouth.
I thought it was "can you settle to shoot me?"
This was a banner episode for fake book titles. "The Sibling Brothers in The Case of the Caper-Case Caper" and "Wolf Man, Bare Chest."
Actually, yeah, kind of. Demme is on the board of directors (which is probably why he was there at a random screening of a Jason Segel movie), as are Ron Howard and Steven Spielberg and some other folks. They regularly get some pretty cool people to come do screenings and Q&A's and things, too. Last summer I got to…
Yep, and he ends the review by saying that the film "should be cut into free ukulele picks for the poor."
"'Mad Dog Time' is the first movie I have seen that does not improve on the sight of a blank screen viewed for the same length of time."
Yeah, it's a shame that people don't talk about Homestar anymore. Now that I think of it, in a lot of ways that site seems like a direct precursor to shows like Adventure Time and Regular Show, with its simplified art style and humor based around a combination of bizarre randomness, odd verbal quirks and '80s pop…
I feel like Evangelion's imperfection is what makes it great.
What do we want? Gays in Scouts!
When do we want it? Timmeh!
When you're talking about Enviro-Bear 2000?
Red Eye
Yep. It probably rounds out my top three or so, behind Bastards of Young and Can't Hardly Wait.
"I've been poisoned by my constituents!"
It's increasingly looking like The Last Guardian is going to become one of these, which is incredibly disappointing. What the hell is going on over there?
Or Help!/The Night Before, or No Reply/I'm a Loser, or…
Cool story, Hansel!
"So I'm rappelling down Mount Vesuvius when suddenly I slip, and I start to fall. Just falling, aah, aah. I'll never forget the terror. When suddenly, I realize 'holy shit, Hansel, haven't you been smoking Peyote for six straight days, and couldn't some of this maybe be in your head?'"
We did it in the road.
But since Richard Belzer is playing himself as Munch, then 30 Rock takes place in a universe where Munch, and by extension the entire Tommy Westphall Multiverse, is fictional.