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kjohnson1585
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Dane Cook wasn't even the original voice. It was supposed to be Jon Cryer. They recorded his lines and everything. It's a really bizarre switch.

Disney is best if you look at their outlier stuff - Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Phineas and Ferb, Gravity Falls, their Disney Afternoon output, Wreck-It Ralph - pretty much their animated stuff, except for that late 90s/2000 stuff that was questionable (Treasure Island, Home on the Range, Brother Bear, the Hercules TV

Well, I know the term tarbaby is a derogatory term for black people, I just don't remember anything else about the scene other than the baby melting (as in I don't remember the story surrounding it).

Accordingly, the most racist part seems to be a depiction of an actual "tar-baby" melting in goo. I'm not sure if there's anything particularly racist about the scene other than the name - it's been a long time since I saw it - since the "Massah" stuff really is on par for the course of these kinds of films, up until

That's actually interesting. They're not big star names, but big COMEDIAN names. In some ways Grown-Ups might be "loved" because these people like to see funny people kinda hang out and be funny with each other (despite the fact the movie could not possibly be funny). People who are enamored by their success from

I would love a Watch This of Cats Don't Dance, Dindal's feature before his cult masterpiece Emperor's New Groove. It's just a charming animated musical with an old school vibe, and in an era where most cartoons are sarcastic or ironic in their references, it's nice to watch something SINCERE.

The scene where the horse dies is still crazy effective. But beyond that, it's passable but mostly forgettable.

It's not really about the kids, is it though? Well, I mean it is, but considering that the box office is going strong overseas, the marketing isn't for American children, but for non-American children.

They totally LeBron'd this.

I was curious if they would have to retcon that episode.

I'm kiiiinda with Josh here. I don't think this was even close to the best episode of the season. It was fine, and functioned as a season finale, but certainly didn't match Gravity Falls at its best.

Yeah, in some ways I think Marlene is the most important side character in the game. The idea is that she definitely went through the same "feels" as Joel, since she pretty much raised her and Joel spend only a year with her. The scary part is that Marlene made the kind of decision that is horrible but necessary. The

Remember the part of the game after you escape the statue and you're walking around Colombia and just enjoying the sights? Why did all that just… go away?

I kinda think Bad Boys (the first) is Bay's 2nd best film behind The Rock. The plot is kinda useless, but Smith and Lawrence are hilarious together and the film is a lot more self-aware of its stupidity and action tropes than people seem to give it credit for. Also, it's framed and editing a lot more coherently than

I'm on the young side so I actually haven't seen the show, although I do want to at least catch that episode now.

Donald P. Bellisario!

Yep, as a kid all I wanted to see was movies with talking dinosaurs - you know, cause dinosaurs are awesome, so of course if they could talk, that would be more awesomer. Of course, most of them are terrible - Dinosaur, We're Back, Theodore Rex, Adventures in Dinosaur City - the original Land Before Time may be the

WAKE UP SMURFLES

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It's weird. I'm not sure if I like the outfits specifically but the boldness and non-selfawareness of the people wearing it. Like, I'll watch Soul Train, and I see everyone just DANCING, not a care in the world, and somehow the outfits compliment that.

I more or less agree, which is part of the reason I haven't quite added the 10s to the list yet.