It’s 4 classes at the start, 4 you unlock, then 3 more blanked out slots in the selection menu with room in its row for 5 more slots.
It’s 4 classes at the start, 4 you unlock, then 3 more blanked out slots in the selection menu with room in its row for 5 more slots.
Pretty much every single design decision they made for the sequel makes me 100% more interested in it than the original. Clear, small, chunky numbers. Status tokens. A complete jettison of roster management, and a greatly reduced focus on inventory management. Excited to see where this goes
I disagree completely.
The point is that everybody has a job on a movie set, and checking the props isn’t the actor’s job. It never has been, and it shouldn’t be.
It’s not the actor’s job to check the gun, just like it’s not the actor’s job to check the camera.
I read this comment in Bob Einstein’s voice, friggen hilarious.
He (Matthias Schweighöfer) is one of the biggest movie stars in Germany. I’m trying to be as neutral here as possible.
I’d assume Netflix took a gamble on his fame. Some people in German speaking countries will definitely stream it. It might appeal to a wider European audience due to the cast and if they’re lucky…
“You know how no one ever likes the part of a zombie movie before the zombies show up? Well, hear me out...”
I’m not sure whether my first reaction to this article was “Is Montasanto the Italian subsidiary of Monsanto?” or “If you’re going to talk about him ‘riding high’ in the mid-90's, what’s Third Rock from the Sun? Chopped liver?”
His best moment was a single line. You’ve got all the core cast trying to figure out how to tell Phoebe’s new boyfriend that his ween hangs out of the bottom of his shorts. Then at the end of the episode Gunther comes over and says, “Hey, buddy, this is a family place. Put the mouse back in the house.”
RIP James. I always thought that the show missed an opportunity to give Gunther a bottle episode. Something that follows him as he gets off work and then reveals that he’s an MI6 operative or a base jumper or a driver on the F1 circuit. Something like that.
RIP. He always killed it when they gave him something to do.
That’s too bad, I liked him, although honestly I can’t remember seeing him in much of anything other than Bosom Buddies and Newhart. And Girls. I enjoyed seeing him pop up briefly in That Thing You Do! because much was made at the time of how much Tom Everett Scott resembled a young Tom Hanks, and Steve Zahn had a…
No idea if this is completely, partially or not at all correct, but seems like he was a really nice guy and seems that he was very well liked by his costars.
I can definitely understand Baldwin feeling a tremendous amount of guilt for this, but the rest of your statement makes no sense to me. Assuming he was using the weapon as intended in the scene, how is this his fault? I can’t imagine it’s standard practice for actors to safety check their props.
4. Quitting Twitter
We showed my 8-year-old niece this movie over the summer, and now she’s going as Wednesday for Halloween. And yeah, it holds up really, really well.
They’re not a family of villains they’re a family with eccentric tastes. Everyone who gets hurt around them are actually hurting themselves because they think they’re better or the Adam’s are bad and try to do something against them. All the Adam’s do is keep to themselves and live there lives.
The first one really is a good film, isn’t it. That Huston/Julia romance is so... palpable.