beamishkinowerks--disqus
Beamish Kinowerks
beamishkinowerks--disqus

CYBIL was very successful; it came close to the syndication threshold, I think.

It really is astonishing how deeply reactionary and outright discriminatory Reddit has become. The site is essentially a cross between 4chan and StormFront.

I just hope that Kino Lorber's upcoming Blu-Ray of 1492: Conquest of Paradise is the extended cut that's been discussed for years

This film made a pretty nice profit as a result of overseas grosses. It certainly wasn't a disaster like Ghostbusters: Answer the Call.

if you write for the AV Club, yes

I swear, the incessant discussion of this show has pushed it to the far end of my "to watch" queue, along with The Wire and Breaking Bad.

you get your own planet after you die, too

Pryor and Wilder, despite working together on numerous projects, were not close to each other, and their relationship often bordered on antagonistic. I'm curious to see ANOTHER YOU (1991) again, but I remember it as being nearly unwatchable.

do you have a blog I can read?

again, how is this different from Jon Stewart's delivery, which felt incredibly tired as well?

we can't all be Jon Stewart and have our mugging into the camera be dubbed comedy genius

it's genuinely satisfying to fans of the original comic and the animated show. Tremendous amount of pathos in it, and fantastic production design, too.

TMNT '90 is up with Batman Returns as the greatest superhero film ever.

didn't this make the news 2 or 3 days ago?

love how this article gives absolutely no credit to the creators of this series. But, hey, sitting in a booth and recording scripted lines is the real work.

I've never given a shit about Jon Stewart. His obnoxious mugging is horrible

Bagge was absolutely brilliant for years…and then he became a Libertarian nutjob. As an aside, check out the horrific test reel for a proposed HATE! animated show that was included on the DVD for the amazing grunge documentary HYPE (1995)

Berger's Underneath the Lintel is one of the finest plays I have ever read. Loved his Spider-Man book, too

It might've been the MOMA's own, as they store nitrate prints

Experienced the incredibly rare treat of seeing nitrate prints projected at UCLA/The Hammer Museum's Billy Wilder Theatre. The films in question were the excellent 20th Century Fox noirs Leave Her to Heaven (the nitrate imbuing the color with rich hues that were just astonishing to see) and Nightmare Alley (a nearly