avclub-fbb1d0aa8eb214a2ce4aec289a3c6b6d--disqus
Pike Bishop
avclub-fbb1d0aa8eb214a2ce4aec289a3c6b6d--disqus

Actually, yeah, Beckel was one of the regular liberals on Fox News. I remember reading some of his columns from a few years back; they were pretty good, although I haven't kept up with them. Sad that he let himself be a pasty on Fox, and sadder that he behaved this way toward a co-worker.

I had no idea this show existed, either.

I kinda feel bad for Pierce Brosnan. He was ideal for the role, it's just that the scripts he got were crap.

One of the best villain deaths in the series. Also, one of the best glib-to-horror responses to another character's gruesome death: "Launder it."

I defend Dalton. Fans of Craig's tense, sardonic interpretation should take another look at License to Kill.

You mean the director of Twentynine Palms and Camille Claudel 1915 failed to make a knee-slapper comedy? I'm shocked!

If the Legend mentioned here is the Tom Cruise/Ridley Scott thing, the two might make for an interesting double feature. Both are legendary flops, but both have a kind of bizarre appeal that makes them worth watching at least once.

Good performance by Nic Cage, but the ending is pretty predictable.

I'm going to watch Suicide Squad soon to see if it's worse than BvS. Any recommendations for getting through the viewing?

Mac and Me was one of the most shameless cash-in attempts ever, so this will be a nice spiritual sequel

Yeah, I normally feel bad for whoever has the job. I would rather shovel elephant shit in the world's lowest-rent zoo than be White House Press Secretary. But unforced errors like this are hard to brush off.

Your state serves Green Mountain Coffee for free at its highway rest areas.* Whatever other problems your state has, that puts it ahead of most others.

But I doubt it will be anywhere near as good as Dances with Smurfs, or at least as it was originally conceived by Testaburger. (Cameron jettisoned some of the finer aspects of her characters' development for those awesome shots of giant flowers.)

I'll take off my Queen of Diamonds costume.

I will watch it for no other reason than to find out where I stand on the crucial question, "Is it worse than Batman vs. Superman?"

The Memory of Justice is a massive documentary (about 4.5 hours long) from Marcel Ophuls, who made the brilliant, disturbing and totally revelatory The Sorrow and the Pity, which I recently watched. Made in the mid-1970s, it has been completely unavailable in any U.S. format until now, after it was restored by the The

It's two hours of people telling Tom Cruise how special and awesome he is. It's like a Scientology circle jerk.

"Oh no, Vanilla Sky is leaving," said nobody, ever.

Thanks. I've heard Springfield's version, but the Mendes version has more flavor.

That's an underrated movie and the best for a lot of the people involved, IMHO