avclub-e84eae1729e82fb7e909a7108dcccd20--disqus
Al Neuman
avclub-e84eae1729e82fb7e909a7108dcccd20--disqus

"Matt Damon!"

Agreed. I read Hank's episode more as another panic attack than "Holy shit, I'm gonna hurl." He's used to the gore that his job brings, even sending Walt photos and laughing about it not too long ago.

If you visit their site and scroll to the bottom, you'll see links for all the companies they own but don't rebrand. It's impressive. Google, Amazon and Apple will own everything eventually. Oh, and Comcast.

Old fashioned! (You asked for it.)

Or do I?

I kid!

It's just too bad he dies at the end.

Gee, I'm real sorry your mom blew up, Ricky.

Okay, not exclusively. I also indulge in Netflix, Hulu Plus and Amazon Prime - but I do watch a 70's carload of MeTV.

Although I did enjoy the rocking literacy PSA (Hey, Levar Burton!) the fist 7,000 times I saw it.

The other best part of MeTV is that if you get rid of cable, there's still a good chance that you get it for free. I cut the cord last fall and watch MeTV almost exclusively.

Lydon did the butter commercials to finance the last PiL album.

It happens so rarely - those surprise albums that are exactly what I like. Picked it up on Amazon and just finished a first run through. I like the uptempo stuff better ("Monolith," "Searches," "Fragmented World," "Made For Breaking") but the whole thing is solid.

I'm pretty sure the guy in the bow tie is Tommy Stinson.

Don't let Gene Simmons see this …

Because Holloway and Shaw have the map. And Weyland's not just stowing away, he's in deep freeze to buy a dying man as much time as possible. David doesn't wake him up until he needs to - which is when he has confirmed contact. We're at the agree to disagree point of this discussion, but I enjoy talking about it.

They aren't joking about the weird rule where the item must belong to you. About ten years ago I hit the AR in my town, with my own Civil War sword and a friend's rhinoceros horn bowl that had been in his family for generations. The sword was only worth about $100 (shit!), but the bowl was rare and (I can only assume)

That's part of why I like talking about this (or any) movie. It's fascinating, really: two people can see the same film and completely disagree about its merits and shortcomings.

I think the fans did. Before you saw the trailers, what was your reaction when you heard Ridley Scott was directing another Alien movie?