batzmania--disqus
Batzmania
batzmania--disqus

Astoria here, and I rarely go into Jackson Heights. I hear that they are very similar to us in their language and customs, particularly in being pissed about the Mets losing.

Her name should be used in a Gothic romance novel.

And a woman, apparently. She's a classy broad.

Don't forget Carey Lowell.

That was a different three-stories episode with the theme of revenge. I don't really remember what Milhouse did, but it wasn't very funny.

Severe weather? Now that's funny!

If you watch Adult Swim enough, you're likely to see the little cartoons he has been doing for them that appear before any of the shows. He's still got it, by crickety!

And wasn't she losing out on attendance? Sure, she could ace the tests and homework, but it looks mighty suspicious if you don't show up for several classes and still pull off a perfect grade.

That gold foil would make my baked potato the coolest in the cafeteria!

Why was that junkie a terrorist? Perhaps her bombing was a sly satire on the destructive force that drugs have…ON SOCIETY.

He must have the strength of 1 1/2 men, because he couldn't take down two men.

Will this special edition include a pair of exciting underwear? That scene really fueled my adolescent imagination.

I like their reward program. Using MoviePass, I can rack them up practically for free.

Wolf Creek was also one of them.

It's simple logic: "hole" is funny.

They once had Jeff Gordon on to say, "Hi, Moe." That was it.

Gimmicks don't add to the story and its themes; films like Birdman and Russian Ark are thematically tied to the seamlessness of space and time and thus are warranted in their use of long single takes.

I don't get that criticism. The single take isn't real nor is meant to be taken as real, and the movie even starts with a cut before the long take and then is interrupted near the end by several quick cuts. Really, the seamless editing and invisible camera floating around dressing room mirrors is Birdman's

I'm sure that Connery was also sick of being swarmed by fans, especially while filming YOLT in Japan.

It's still my favorite movie of all time. Doesn't matter how many I've seen (and I've seen plenty), Who Framed Roger Rabbit made me a film fan and an animation fanatic.