avclub-e95a45d0b1f5afdf0ab9cde82b4b1d06--disqus
Bender Bukowski
avclub-e95a45d0b1f5afdf0ab9cde82b4b1d06--disqus

Yeah, he and Thompsons seem to have aged the most gracefully out of the five. And he was always my favorite anyway.

It's a fact!

They made her so irritating that it wasn't even a problem having Duane Jones smack her in the face in 1968.

Lollypop chainsaw?

The remake had Mena Suvari filling out a set of ACU's. Other than that, it might be the worst thing to come out of this zombie craze which has been going on for a decade now.

Yeah. Desolation Angels might have been his most well balanced work, and the way it ends just prior to his fame and alcoholic oblivion makes it his very creative pinnacle. It was all devolution after that.

Yeah. He got old, it happens.

He had his moments. If you check out the penguin edition w/the two or three best chapters from each of his novels you'll find they collectively make for a great book.

If there's a DVD extra of Seth and Rachael doing the voice acting for this episode in the same room, they need to shut up and take my money.

Nahhhh. He was Duffman, some of the time.

Something about pre-HD episodes no longer being owned by Fox.

Yeah, this wasn't half bad. Far from a renaissance, but it recalled 22 short films about Springfield in a good sort of way.

Ugh.

That story isn't suitable for children.

You really should have gone to NYCC, that kind of commentary would have fit right in at their panel.

Gertrude was their leader, always chewing on cuban cigars.

Dennis Leary.

Also James Joyce could fly planes, for some reason.

In 1923, Parisian expatriate Hob Gadling learns of the imprisonment of his friend within a maximum security compound located just outside of London and assembles a crew of mercenaries to stage his escape.