WTF? Rush started in 1968. I can understand actresses shaving years off their ages, but…
WTF? Rush started in 1968. I can understand actresses shaving years off their ages, but…
She was also in "Arthur", one of my favorite Alfred Hitchcock Presents episodes, costarring with Laurence Harvey.
It would be a while before TV could start showing divorcees on a regular basis. Mike and Carol Brady were both widowed, which didn't seem to have had much effect on their kids. Mary Richards was supposed to be divorced in the original pilot script but it was changed to her just realizing that her fiance wasn't right…
One difference is that physical special effects are something, even if it's obvious that they're not what they're supposed to be. When you see through CGI you realize that there's quite literally nothing there. Doctor Who turns this into kind of an asset, but then its record of getting around dodgy FX goes all the way…
Since we're more likely to identify with the characters who look to be standard size rather than wildly larger or smaller, "The Invaders" is also more ambitious in that it humanizes the alien and alienizes the humans.
Pretty much the whole series is on YouTube, although some episodes have ads inserted at annoying random times where there weren't commercial breaks in the original.
Todd and Zack have been great Virgils to our collective Dante. And I have to say this series has had about the best comment section on the site too.
Here's another fanfic idea: Paul Kinsey and George McFly collaborate on a novel serialized in "Fantastic".
When the hitman comes I know damn well I've been cheated.
Wow. I'm not going to try and follow up with this. The project is just too big. But my hat's off to you. And I agree with your taste in Hitlers. (Not a sentence you hear every day.)
Here we are at the end.
Clever. I would have just stuck with the "don't squeeze the Charmin" thing.
"It's a hot day and the water from my sprinkler looks tempting. But if you don't move along you'll find yourselves in a most unwelcoming part… of the Twilight Zone."
Interesting sixties counterculture notes on "Come Wander With Me". One is that Bonnie Beecher was a singer/songwriter in real life, and she'd known Dylan back in Minnesota when he was Robert Zimmerman. She also went on to marry Wavy Gravy.
We're in the leftovers section of Serling's Twilight Zone. Matheson and Beaumont had checked out, the latter not voluntarily, and the show could no longer sustain itself. And maybe knowing that lowers expectations somewhat, benefiting these final episodes. Because I actually enjoyed these two.
That's another one I;ll be seeing for the first time. Seems to have a certain Manly Wade Wellman quality, at least as far as the synopsis goes. I'm interested in seeing how it stacks up.
I've been there, son. Not that I let it stop me, usually, but I often find he's said it first and better.
"Mr. Garrity and the Graves" is enjoyable.t sort of gives me pause that it makes light of domestic violence in the way it was. It could be that when it was made society wasn't really acknowledging male-on-female violence, and so the audience and Serling himself found the idea of female-on-male violence too absurd to…
I just found "The Encounter" impossible to enjoy. It's static and, while maybe not intending so, racist. One problem is that while Fenton is presented as a creep, he at least gets developed. He shows some awareness of why his wife left him, why he lost his job, why things he did during the war might not be too cool.…
I got worried when Zack did "I Am the Night, Color Me Black" before the hiatus and she didn't show up to comment on it. She'd said she planned to defend it. Haven't seen her since then either. Hope she's all right.