The Restoration episode is one of the most entertainingly horrifying pieces of TV I've seen in some time.
The Restoration episode is one of the most entertainingly horrifying pieces of TV I've seen in some time.
Ah, Stu. We barely knew ye, which is just fine with me.
My wife & I have been very much enjoying the third series. I am glad, though, that the contestant who was knocked out in the first round (name omitted to avoid spoilers) wasn't around for the whole series. I'm sure he's a perfectly nice guy in person, but he seemed kind of insufferable on the show.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, seasons 6 & 7?
You probably need all of those languages to successfully order a meal at Al's Pancake World.
If you have to kill off one of them, the choice is clear.
Hey, it worked for "Sledge Hammer!"
"That makes sense — so I just go out the same way I came in?"
My entry is also in the "goddamn water level" category: In college, I used to play the hell out of Harry the Handsome Executive, a bird's-eye adventure game where you're running around an office building in a swivel chair collecting items and defeating malfunctioning robots. But the goddamn water level always…
Now that sounds like music!
"Never Say Never Again" wasn't on the list, so I was disappointed.
Say buddy, what takes fifty years to get up to the top floor and thirty seconds to get down?
Earth 2 had its flaws, but Terry O'Quinn and Clancy Brown (another Lost alum!) were pretty damn good on it.
What I really want is for Max Medina to come back and yell at Lorelai for a while for treating him so shabbily.
Though in all seriousness, a plot like that would involve Mary Lynn Rajskub doing comedic work, which I'm always in favor of.
I've said it before: if this revival doesn't have all of the troubadours from that one episode where the town is invaded by troubadours, then I really don't see the point of the whole thing.
If Liz Torres and Michael Winters aren't returning, I question whether this project is worthwhile.
So given that the "History of Violence" feature is going to feature only one movie per year in history, what are the hardest choices that Tom Breihan will have to make?
I hope that this is a success, because then maybe the NBC execs will start watching his other films for more family-friendly material to adapt.