Guy Incognito II, Alf, and Janis Joplin.
Guy Incognito II, Alf, and Janis Joplin.
Chances that this is a marketer/bot programmed to dispute bad reviews: 80%, maybe?
*hope
That King of the Hill episode with competitive Boggle was downright riveting.
In games with manual save slots, repeatedly saving over the same slot just to make sure I actually saved.
That's the movie where Sandler's character is obsessed with Shadow of the Colossus. Someone involved with the film is on record as saying it made sense because the Colossi fall like the Twin Towers did.
For the record, I'm not denying the grave seriousness of PTSD; your initial comment just read as dismissive of non-American casualties (I haven't seen this movie, but apparently it's based on a "true story," even if the kid lived/never existed there are plenty of documented cases of civilians being killed or injured…
I don't know the exact situation with his father (it certainly didn't come through in the post I read/replied to, and I haven't been paying any attention to other comment threads) and while I agree that PTSD is terrible and life destroying, it's not really here nor there in terms of what I was actually disagreeing…
I haven't seen it in years, but isn't the arc of the film that everyone "knows" he's bullshitting until the end when all the fantastic characters show up at his funeral?
Wow, way to jump down my throat. You just said we shouldn't worry about people who are shot and killed because the killers might suffer psychological consequences. Which is such atrocious bullshit that you have to be a troll, so whatever.
As life destroying as being shot by a high powered sniper rifle?
That seems to me like a really odd comparison to make, but I never saw Beowulf. Was it good enough to watch and then occasionally reference?
He decides not to, but then his teammate tells him over mic that there's an achievement for it.
The gap between retiring Jerry and bringing him back was so short it must have been planned as a joke. He never aspired to be anything more than a hapless low-level government employee, even in retirement.
Jamm works well as an antagonist for Leslie, but I've gotten few real laughs out of his antics.
I came here to say this only to find a polar bear had beaten me to it, as they are wont to do.
My highschool's English curriculum, for the entire four years, was five or six childrens' novels and The Scarlet Letter which may as be baby's first adult novel for how unsubtle its symbolism is.
You have a point; I don't know of any other joke that's so commonly misunderstood.
I don't, and I can't tell what kind of point you're trying to make, but your description of it made me crack up.
He really was not tolerable as an actor before (or after) his personal life became batshit bizarre, so I'm not sure why I see so many people drawing the line there.