avclub-dd447685c5e7ee4499734a2074294b82--disqus
Resist or Serve
avclub-dd447685c5e7ee4499734a2074294b82--disqus

This along with "The Bridge on the River Kwai" gives me the idea that there should be a William Holden Week for Watch This.

Gross. If he sincerely made a reference to "Atlas Shrugged" it would be the worst thing he, or anyone else for that matter, has ever done.

*Heavy sigh

Yikes.

"NEEDS MORE CAMP!"

Coming this January to NBC!

I suppose this will have to do until the 'Hannibal' season two premier.

Coming this fall to ABC . . . from the cast and writers of "Happy Endings" comes a new comedy entitled "Pleasant Finales".

Newton's 3rd law of the Internet.

Seven of Nine in love with a handsome Ensign or someone would be interesting. Sometimes one forgot that there were a few hundred people on that ship (except when someone other than a main character needed to die/get seriously injured when computer panels exploded) and it would have been nice to get reminded of that.

I recently re-watched the film with someone who had never seen it. Those bats really upset them.

The brilliance of the film is that it manages to appease audience
expectations while also subverting them. The most important takeaway
from the ending isn't the building of the bridge or the attempt to
destroy it . . . it's how pointless everything ultimately was.

*heavy sigh

The "Ballet of the Murderous Hedge Animals" and the show stopping number, "Don't go in! (To Room 237)" will make the whole thing worth it.

"I want to see people in space doing cool space shit"

NOT AVAILABLE IN UNIMATRIX ZERO

"Cheap symbolism abounds in the Sundance indie The Truth About Emanuel"

Watching that movie was one of the most unpleasant viewing experiences of my life.

Although I'm equally sick of over-scored scenes in horror . . . basically I'd just like to see more minimalism in the genre. Make the audience feel scared, don't tell them to be scared.

"An Arctic research facility whose occupants all appear to have died
horribly, the strains of “Do You Know The Way To San Jose” increasing
the horror via ironic juxtaposition".