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Bob K
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I see where you're coming from, but I also had to keep an eye out for stray episodes of Forever Knight. And I even liked their version of "Twilight Zone-esque anthology series": Welcome To Paradox (for the short time it lasted).

For some reason that enunciation keeps coming back to me. Such a good job of taking what might be just a word and using it to try to tell his underlings something potentially important about the guy they're chasing.

Are you sure that Sam bottoms or is that just some John you Heard?

They turned that around so fast that I was certain that is would turn out she'd killed the wrong person. Certain and wrong.

Might also have been one argument in favor of Sherlock's view on marriage.

Brushing her WHAT?

And he was only really stopped by a bunch of rakes left out on the lawn.

Seems like a nice alternative to David Tenant Dr. Who's: "Today, everyone lives!"

Maybe a little pulled pork.

You're mostly right, but two notes:

Thanks for the link, I'd never seen that before.

Pretty well. I'll admit when I showed it to another person it didn't seem as good as when I saw it myself, but that could be social anxiety.

Key advantage of time travel: realizing that you better not stay with Fleur or some werewolf will eat your face.

Didn't they already make the movie you mention and wasn't it called Click? I could never bring myself to go see it but that was my understanding.

*SPECULATION SPOILERS*

It manages to not be as icky as the premise would suggest (although not 100% non-icky), and there's a moment when he gets a taste of his own medicine from his father changing the son's past against his stated wishes (something they might have explored more). But I think that where the specific characters go with the

This comment made me wonder whether you can simultaneously up- and down- vote something. Turns out you can't, so up it is!

First thing to come to my mind: the lethal JAWBREAKER from the film of that name, sort of a Heathers reprise combined with a before-its-time Mean Girls. Not as good as either of those, but had something going on, including that "everyone became kind of famous" quality. (Rose McGowan, Julie Benz, Judy Greer…)

Nice point. And fits nicely with the very first Peanuts strip (one of my favorites):

That's interesting. Sort of the same chill-out message as Sullivan's Travels.