I've always thought We Hate Movies was recorded at a good sound level. Of course, I also listen on over-the-ears headphones and at high volume, so my perspective might be skewed.
I've always thought We Hate Movies was recorded at a good sound level. Of course, I also listen on over-the-ears headphones and at high volume, so my perspective might be skewed.
One of my friends, and a very, very early Podmass, recommended A Geek's Guide To The Universe. While the guests were really strong, drawing all throughout the SF/F world, the audio quality made it really hard to focus and enjoy.
I can't entirely blame A.A. for this, since IMDB lists Vile as being directed by a different Taylor Sheridan. Also, even the description for Wind River at Sundance itself lists this as his directorial debut: http://www.sundance.org/pro…
There's an Inventory about that from this fine website. Let me see if I can find it. Yup, here it is. Bit more like films that were successful there but didn't do well upon release.: http://www.avclub.com/artic…
Fair enough. I thought you were more saying that audiences needed Bruce Willis to appear to make it immediately apparent that it's in the Unbreakable universe rather than just insinuating it. I get now that it's the entire concept that annoys you.
I think you're taking it too far to assume most people would assume this is in the same Unbreakable universe without confirmation of the Willis cameo. Before that, I was just thinking that certain elements reminded me of Unbreakable, like the Amtrak train. To automatically make the jump that it's set in the same…
Yeah, not making Donnie Yen fighting the main event of your movie has to constitute a crime in international tribunals.
And now you have Jim Carrey to really blame.
Close; it was actually the first Ace Ventura film, Pet Detective.
To be fair, we went with Earth Girls Are Easy as our actual answer for the Jim Carrey screenwriting credit, on the assumption that it'd be super early in his career, where he'd be inclined to write his own material.
Good job, got both of the ones you answered correct. Joan Blondell was actually the only correct answer we wrote down for the entire guest round on menstruation.
Even though the name was thought of outside of our group, it was too good not to use.
More that that one was remembered first over Batman Forever. Number 23, we had to think of whether Schumacher actually directed that or not.
Still a right answer!
As I said in my intro, the guest round was done by one of my teammates, and she wanted to do a round about menstruation.
Correct on a lot of things. Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is the name of the album that it detailed the making of, but the documentary title is from one of the songs from the album. I'm glad my attempt to make the question harder worked, as Robert Russo is wrong; the films used in the actual question were It's A Mad, Mad, Mad,…
You've got the answer right. At a horror film Meetup group, they had that playing in the background. Looked okayish, but I somehow managed to miss Shatner the times I was looking at it.
Stellar job as always. Got all that you answered correctly. Good job in particular on knowing Anatomy Of Hell and managing to remember Monsters Vs. Aliens. You also got the one Jim Carrey question we got right, and even there, we weren't 100% sure The Number 23 was Schumacher film.
Last night was very enjoyable at movie trivia, even with me getting severely rained on before coming to trivia and my team not doing as well as we normally do. Still, where The Hand That Lox The Bagel stumbled, my other film group team, The Texas Chainstore Manager, was able to prevail. The first round was mostly good…
I checked IMDB right now to be sure I wasn't crazy, and it's actually spelled in the credits Daizy. However, it's pronounced the same, so I feel it still counts. Played by Jonathan Penner, the screenwriter and former three time Survivor contestant.